Archive July 2, 2025

Tottenham sign teenage Japan defender Koga

Images courtesy of Getty

Toko Koga, a young Japan defender, has been signed by Tottenham from Feyenoord.

Koga, 19, will wear the 32 shirt until June 2029 and has reached a deal.

She first competed in the Dutch top flight at the age of 18 and has been with Feyenoord since January 2024.

As Japan won the 2025 SheBelieves Cup in February, Koga won her country’s winning goal against the United States under the direction of former Chelsea manager Emma Hayes, who also won the tournament.

Koga is thought to have been identified in a pre-season friendly played at their training facility last year, despite the women’s Super League placing them 11th overall in 2024-25.

Since then, the club has monitored her progress and set her as a transfer target.

Robert Vilahamn, the head coach of Spurs, was fired in June after two years in charge.

A graphic that reads 'Follow our women's football TikTok' with a picture of a mobile phone

related subjects

  • Football
  • Women’s Football

Renaming The Polytechnic Ibadan After Olunloyo Stands — Oyo Commissioner

Dotun Oyelade, the state’s information commissioner, has criticized the state’s decision to rename The Polytechnic Ibadan in honor of Victor Olunloyo, a former governor of the state.

Oyelade made this statement on Wednesday’s episode of The Morning Brief on Channels Television, in response to a protest by polytechnic students on Tuesday against the state government’s decision.

“Don’t forget that this man was the same man who became the institution’s first rector in 1970, when he was 35 years old. We therefore think that the protestation is somewhat lost and misplaced.

We support that choice because it is appropriate for a respectable state’s son, he said.

Read more about the students’ protests against the polytechnic Ibadan’s renaming.

The commissioner argued that despite the state government’s respect for the academic institution’s students, it would continue to make its own determination.

Oyelade added that the students’ opposition was caused by their ignorance of the former governor’s contribution to the state’s development.

We show great respect for our students. We rely on them, and as the deputy governor pointed out yesterday, we’ll do anything to please them.

“But we’ll be tough and fair.” We are sticking to our decision this time, he continued.

To honor the late scholar, Seyi Makinde, the governor of Oyo State, changed the name to Omololu Olunloyo Polytechnic, Ibadan on June 26, 2025.

Olunloyo, who passed away on April 6, 2025, was the polytechnic’s founding principal and also served as state governor between October 1 and December 31, 1983.

Makinde said, “I discussed preserving and digitising his library yesterday in honor of Baba Olunloyo,” at the state interdenominational funeral service held in honor of the late former governor at the Obafemi Awolowo Stadium, Liberty Road, Ibadan.
“Today, we’re going to honor Baba in order to make him immortal.” He was the Polytechnic’s first Principal in Ibadan, which will now go by the name Omololu Olunloyo Polytechnic, Ibadan.

However, on Tuesday, Olunloyo was the institution’s new name, prompting students from the polytechnic to protest the name change at the Oyo State Government Secretariat.

The angry student urged the polytechnic’s founder to reverse his decision and give the school its current name by carrying placards with various inscriptions.

The Ibadan Polytechnic’s students, led by Olamide Oladipupo, president of the Students Union Government (SUG), made an appeal to the governor to protect the institution’s legacy, which is reflected in the name it bears all over the world.

At least three dead after AU helicopter crashes at airport in Somalia

At least three people were killed when an African Union peacekeeping mission’ helicopter crashed at the international airport in Mogadishu, according to authorities.

According to Artan Mohamed, the head of the airport’s immigration office, the incident took place on Wednesday at Aden Adde airport as the helicopter attempted to land.

Eight people were on board the helicopter, which belonged to the Ugandan Air Force but was being operated by the African Union Support and Stabilization Mission in Somalia (AUSSOM), he claimed. It took off from Baledogle Airfield in the Lower Shabelle region.

A Ugandan military spokesman claims that three of the passengers on board managed to survive the incident.

At least three people were also found to have survived the collision, which allegedly occurred at around 7.30 am (04:30GMT) local time.

Without providing further information about their health, the survivors were transported to the AUSSOM hospital, it continued.

Witnesses described the helicopter exploding, igniting a fire, and plummeting to the ground.

Omar Farah, an aviation officer, told The Associated Press that he “saw the helicopter spinning and then it fell very quickly, while Abdirahim Ali, a resident, claimed he witnessed “a huge explosion and smoke everywhere.”

Flights resumed, according to the director-general of the nation’s civil aviation authority, despite the airport’s reported minor delays.

“The situation has been managed,” he declared. According to Ahmed Macalin Hassan, the runway is level and fully operational, and flights can take off and land as usual.

More than 11, 000 Somalia residents, including those from Kenya and Uganda, make up the AUSSOM mission.

They are aiding the Somali military in battling al-Shabab, an al-Qaeda affiliate that wants to overthrow the nation’s ruling class and establish its own rule.

According to state media reports, the Somali army killed a well-known member of the organization this week in the Middle Shabelle.

Chelsea sign Australia defender Carpenter

Chelsea FC

Ellie Carpenter from Lyon has been signed for an undisclosed fee by women’s super league champion Chelsea.

After five years with Chelsea, Carpenter, 25, won the Champions League in 2019-20 and 2021-22, played for Sonia Bompastor at Lyon before quitting.

“I’m very pleased to join such a large club, one of the biggest in women’s football,” Carpenter said.

“I’m delighted to be a part of Chelsea’s success in England,” he said.

The following day, Canada’s Ashley Lawrence, 30, left the Blues for Lyon, the club that also won the FA Cup and the League Cup in 2024 and 2025.

Carpenter, who made her senior Australia debut at the age of 15, is a vastly experienced player with 87 international caps.

She became the youngest woman to play football at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio when she was 16 years old.

Her professional career includes a stint with the Portland Thorns in the United States.

A graphic that reads 'Follow our women's football TikTok' with a picture of a mobile phone

related subjects

  • Football
  • Women’s Football

Did God want Trump to bomb Iran?

After ordering the United States military to bomb Iran last month, US President Donald Trump made a brief address at the White House to laud the “massive precision strike” that had allegedly put a “stop to the nuclear threat posed by the world’s number one state sponsor of terror”.

The speech, which lasted less than four minutes, ended with the invocation of God’s name no fewer than five times in a span of seven seconds: “And I wanna just thank everybody and in particular, God. I wanna just say, ‘We love you God, and we love our great military – protect them.’ God bless the Middle East, God bless Israel, and God bless America.”

Of course, the terminology deployed in the speech was problematic before we even got to the rapid-fire mention of the Almighty by a man who has never been particularly religious. For one thing, Iran simply lacks the credentials to qualify as the world’s “number one state sponsor of terror”; that position is already occupied by the US itself, which, unlike Iran, has spent the entirety of its contemporary history bombing and otherwise antagonising folks in every last corner of the Earth.

The US has also continued to serve as the number one state sponsor of Israel, whose longstanding policy of terrorising Palestinians and other Arabs has now culminated in an all-out genocide in the Gaza Strip, as Israel seeks to annihilate the territory and its inhabitants along with it.

But anyway, “God bless Israel.”

This, to be sure, was not the first time that Trump relied on God to sign off on worldly events. Back in 2017, during the man’s first stint as president, the deity made various appearances in Trump’s official statement following a US military strike on Syria. God, it seems, just can’t get enough of war.

God made a prominent return in January 2025, taking centre stage in Trump’s inauguration speech – yet another reminder that the separation of church and state remains one of the more transparently disingenuous pillars of American “democracy.” In his address, the president revealed the true reason he had survived the widely publicised assassination attempt in Pennsylvania in July 2024: “I was saved by God to make America great again.”

Part of making America great again was supposed to be focusing on ourselves instead of, you know, getting wrapped up in other people’s wars abroad. But the beauty of having God on your side means you really don’t have to explain too much in the end; after all, it’s all divine will.

Indeed, Trump’s increasing reliance on the Almighty can hardly be interpreted as a come-to-Jesus moment or a sudden embrace of the faith. Rather, God-talk comes in handy in the business of courting white evangelical Christians, many of whom already see Trump himself as a saviour in his own right based on his valiant worldwide war on abortion, among other campaigns to inflict earthly suffering on poor and vulnerable people.

The evangelical obsession with Israel means Trump has earned big saviour points in that realm, as well. In 2019, for example, the president took to Twitter to thank Wayne Allyn Root – an American Jewish-turned-evangelical conservative radio host and established conspiracy theorist – for his “very nice words,” including that Trump was the “best President for Israel in the history of the world” and that Israeli Jews “love him like he’s the King of Israel”.

And not only that: Israelis also “love him like he is the second coming of God”.

Obviously, anyone with an ego as big as Trump’s has no problem playing God – especially when he already believes that his every proclamation should spontaneously be made reality, biblical creation story-style.

Former Arkansas governor and zealous evangelical Mike Huckabee, who once declared that “there is no such thing as a Palestinian” and who is now serving as Trump’s ambassador to Israel, has done his own part to encourage the president’s messiah complex, writing in a text message to Trump that “I believe you hear from heaven … You did not seek this moment. This moment sought YOU!”

So it was only fitting that Trump should thank and profess love for God after bombing Iran in accordance with Israel’s wishes – not that US and Israeli interests don’t align when it comes to sowing regional havoc and ensuring the flow of capital into arms industry coffers.

And yet, Trump is not the only US head of state to have enjoyed wartime communications with God. Recall the time in 2003 that then-President and “war on terror” chief George W Bush informed Palestinian ministers of his “mission from God”.

Palestinian Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath would go on to quote snippets from Bush’s side of the conversation: “God would tell me, ‘George, go and fight those terrorists in Afghanistan.’ And I did, and then God would tell me, ‘George, go and end the tyranny in Iraq.’ And I did.”

Now, Trump doesn’t like to take orders from anyone, even if they’re from on high. However, he’s made it clear that he’s not opposed to ingratiating himself with God in the interest of political expediency.

Some evangelical adherents see the current upheaval in the Middle East as potentially expediting the so-called “end times” and the second coming of Jesus – which means the more war, the better. And the more that God can be portrayed as an ally in US and Israeli-inflicted devastation, the better for Trump’s delusions of deification.