Archive November 13, 2025

New review urges UK to repatriate Shamima Begum, others from Syria

The United Kingdom government should voluntarily facilitate the return of former repentant ISIL (ISIS) member Shamima Begum and others living in Syrian camps and deprived of British nationality, a new report has urged.

The Independent Commission on UK Counter-Terrorism Law, Policy and Practice said the current stance of the government towards nationals and former nationals detained in Syrian camps was “increasingly untenable” as they were living under “inhuman” conditions.

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“The government should facilitate voluntary repatriation for British nationals, including those deprived of British nationality,” it asserted.

“A coherent, humane, and security-conscious repatriation strategy would strengthen compliance with international obligations and promote long-term public safety and social stability.”

Begum’s case lies at the heart of the UK policy of revoking the citizenship of nationals who joined armed groups in Syria. She left London in 2015 as a minor, at the age of 15, with two school friends, and later married an ISIL fighter. Begum gave birth to three children, all of whom died in infancy.

In 2019, the UK government revoked her citizenship soon after she was discovered in a detention camp in Syria.

Since then, she has challenged the decision, which was turned down by an appeals court in February 2024. Born in the UK to Bangladeshi parents, Begum does not hold Bangladeshi citizenship.

She had admitted that she joined the organisation knowing it was proscribed as a “terror” group, and has said she was “ashamed” and regretted joining the group.

Conditions at camps ‘dangerous’

Citing the United Nations, the report described conditions at the camps, including the infamous al-Hol and al-Roj camps, as “inhuman, dangerous, and degrading”.

“Many detainees, especially women and children, are victims of coercion, trafficking, or exploitation, even if some have been involved in terrorism-related activity,” it added.

According to the commission, between 55-72 UK-linked individuals remain in the camps and other detention centres, including 30-40 children.

The report said the UK’s “reluctance” to repatriate its citizens, including those stripped of their citizenship, made it an “outlier” among “comparable jurisdictions” and could prove to be “counterproductive to long-term security interests”.

Tuberculosis kills 1.23 million people last year, WHO says

Tuberculosis deaths have fallen by 3 percent to 1.23 million people in 2024, the World Health Organization (WHO) says.

In its annual TB report published on Wednesday, the United Nations health agency also revealed that overall cases of the disease had dropped by almost 2 percent since 2023.

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It marked the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic that TB cases and deaths had declined.

In 2024, a record 8.3 million people accessed TB treatment after being newly diagnosed while treatment success rates rose from 68 to 71 percent, the WHO said.

However, the health agency warned that recent progress in tackling the disease was under threat due to a shortfall in aid. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said it could “reverse the hard won gains”.

Last year, $5.9bn was available for prevention, diagnosis and treatment, far below the annual target of $22bn by 2027.

“Declines in the global burden of TB and progress in testing, treatment, social protection and research are all welcome news after years of setbacks, but progress is not victory,” the WHO chief said.

“The fact that TB continues to claim over a million lives each year despite being preventable and curable is simply unconscionable,” Tedros added.

Although TB deaths in 2024 were 29 percent lower than those recorded in 2015, the WHO had hoped to reduce this figure by 75 percent by 2025 and 90 percent by 2030.

The number of deaths could even rise in the years ahead, warned Tereza Kasaeva, director of WHO’s division for tuberculosis, HIV and related infections.

“Long-term cuts to international donor funding could result in up to 2 million additional deaths and 10 million people falling ill with TB between 2025 and 2035,” Kasaeva said.

The agency was dealt a significant financial blow when the United States withdrew from it in January, forcing a 21 percent cut to its proposed spending.

The decision by US President Donald Trump’s administration to slash foreign aid, particularly from the US Agency for International Development, has also raised fears about global TB treatment.

Shevchenko v Weili – how to make a UFC super-fight

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Valentina Shevchenko versus Zhang Weili pits two of the best female fighters on the planet against each other at UFC 322 on Saturday in New York.

Shevchenko, who has been queen of the UFC’s flyweight division for the best part of seven years, is looking to strengthen her claim to be the best women’s mixed martial artist of all time.

Weili, meanwhile, is hoping to embark on a new chapter in her distinguished career after vacating her strawweight title to move up a division.

Kyrgyzstan’s Shevchenko sits atop the UFC’s pound-for-pound rankings, with China’s Weili at number two.

‘This is the fight fans want to see’

This is a cross-divisional meeting between two all-time greats still touching their prime.

When UFC president Dana White confirmed the bout, he described it as “literally the definition of a super-fight”.

Shevchenko is one of the most successful athletes in UFC history, with her 10 wins in title fights putting the 37-year-old second on the women’s all-time list.

A win over Weili, 36, would move Shevchenko joint first alongside the woman with the most UFC title fight wins – Amanda Nunes.

After defeating France’s Manon Fiorot in May, Shevchenko praised Weili, floating the idea of a fight between the pair.

“Zhang has the same passion for martial arts as me, the same mindset. It’s not about fame – this is what I like about her,” said Shevchenko.

“I’m hearing from fans this is the fight they want to see.”

Perhaps Shevchenko looked outside the flyweight division because she has continuously got the better of foes within it.

Her only blip since becoming champion in 2018 is a defeat by Alexa Grasso in 2023, but after a draw in the rematch she regained her title in the trilogy fight last September.

If Weili beats Shevchenko, she will become only the second woman to become a two-division UFC champion after Nunes, but the first to do it at strawweight and flyweight.

Weili is a two-time strawweight champion and vacated her belt after making the third defence of her second reign against Tatiana Suarez in February.

Many regard Weili as the best strawweight in UFC history, but she faces stiff competition from Poland’s Joanna Jedrzejczyk.

Stat leaders in striking and grappling

When it comes to how the fight might play out in the octagon, the pair are evenly matched.

Schevchenko is an elite counter-striker, while Weili leans heavily on her strength and aggression.

Both Shevchenko at flyweight and Weili at strawweight are among the record holders when it comes to grappling and striking stats in their divisions.

Shevchenko has the second-highest significant strike accuracy in UFC history at flyweight with 54.6%, while Weili is fourth at strawweight with 53.9%.

Shevchenko also has the best striking defence in flyweight history, having only absorbed 1.86 strikes per minute.

Weili is 10th on the all-time strawweight list, with 2.77 strikes per minute.

To be among the all-time stat leaders in striking and grappling is a reflection of a world-class athlete and this applies to both Shevchenko and Weili.

Shevchenko has the second-highest takedown accuracy in flyweight history at 62.8%, with Weili eighth at strawweight with 45.6%.

There is little to separate the pair when it comes to grappling, with Shevchenko’s top position percentage of 30.6 just pipping Weili’s 29.8.

Their takedown defence is equally as impressive, with Shevchenko fifth among the flyweight record holders at 77.4% and Weili just outside the top 10 at strawweight with 74%.

A defining factor may be how well Weili adapts to the 10-pound weight jump from strawweight to flyweight.

Will she have the same power at 125lb (8st 13lb)? Will her physical strength translate against a natural flyweight?

Shevchenko v Weili prediction

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Can Trump dole out $2,000 tariff dividends, direct healthcare payments?

Amid a record-setting government shutdown and Democratic wins in an off-year election, President Donald Trump has floated a series of unusual policy ideas.

Fifty-year mortgages? Paying Americans, instead of insurers, for health coverage? Dividends of $2,000 from tariff revenues? Bonuses for air traffic controllers who showed up for work during the shutdown? All proposed by the president in the span of a few days.

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We looked at each of these proposals, and whether policy experts think they are likely to come to fruition.

Each idea is, for now, little more than a presidential musing on social media. To become reality, most would require formal proposals and legislation passed by both chambers of Congress. Other ideas, such as the mortgages, would likely require significant action by lenders.

Adding a 50-year mortgage option

On November 8, Trump posted to Truth Social side-by-side portraits of President Franklin D Roosevelt and himself, with “30-year mortgage” above Roosevelt and “50-year mortgage” above Trump. A headline said, “Great American Presidents.”

The notion quickly drew backlash, among both housing policy experts and Trump’s own base of supporters. Politico reported that the idea had originated with Federal Housing Director Bill Pulte.

Trump told Fox News’s Laura Ingraham on November 10, “All it means is you pay less per month. Pay it over a longer period of time. It’s not like a big factor. It might help a little bit.” During the interview, Ingraham corrected Trump, a lifelong real estate developer, when he said mortgages last 40 years today, rather than 30.

Trump ignores the downsides of 50-year mortgages, experts say.

First, a borrower would pay far more interest over the loan’s life.

Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, a Columbia University real estate and finance professor, offered an example of a $450,000 home. With a fixed interest rate of 6.2 percent and a 20 percent down payment, a borrower would pay about $434,000 in interest with a 30-year mortgage, and more than $800,000 in interest with a 50-year mortgage.

Mortgages are structured so that a borrower is mostly paying off interest during the loan’s early years. Getting a 50-year mortgage lengthens the period of heavy interest payments and delays equity accumulation. With a 30-year mortgage, a 30-year-old buyer who wanted to stay in their home could expect to own it mortgage-free by age 60, but the same borrower with a 50-year mortgage would not own the home outright until age 80.

Van Nieuwerburgh warned that lower monthly payments might entice buyers to spend more on housing, which could push up housing prices, hampering any wider benefits to real estate affordability.

Paying Americans directly for health care

In another November 8 Truth Social post, Trump wrote, “I am recommending to Senate Republicans that the Hundreds of Billions of Dollars currently being sent to money sucking Insurance Companies in order to save the bad Healthcare provided by ObamaCare, BE SENT DIRECTLY TO THE PEOPLE SO THAT THEY CAN PURCHASE THEIR OWN, MUCH BETTER, HEALTHCARE, and have money left over.”

Trump elaborated during his Ingraham interview, saying, “Instead of going to the insurance companies, I want the money to go into an account for people where the people buy their own health insurance. It’s so good. The insurance will be better. It’ll cost less.”

Without a formal proposal, it’s difficult to evaluate how this might work. But it seems similar to existing Health Savings Accounts, often favoured by conservatives. These accounts let people set aside money before taxes to pay for out-of-pocket medical expenses, such as deductibles and copayments.

However, under current law, these accounts’ funds generally cannot be used to pay insurance premiums. That would not necessarily be the case with Trump’s proposal.

Some progressives said if Trump wants to cut out insurance companies, expanding Medicare to everyone would be a way to accomplish that.

“Yes, Mr President: You’re right. We do have ‘the worst health care’ of any major country,” Senator Bernie Sanders responded on X. “Despite spending twice as much per capita, we are the only major country not to guarantee health care to all as a human right. The solution: Medicare for All.”

Trump proposed $2,000 payments for Americans from tariff dividends

Trump promised Americans $2,000 each from what he called the “trillions of dollars” in tariff revenue he said his administration has collected.

“People that are against Tariffs are FOOLS!,” Trump said in a November 9 Truth Social post. “We are taking in Trillions of Dollars and will soon begin paying down our ENORMOUS DEBT, $37 Trillion. Record Investment in the USA, plants and factories going up all over the place. A dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high income people!) will be paid to everyone.”

There are no formal proposals yet for these tariff dividends. Trump did not define the income cutoff and did not say whether children would receive the payment. He also has not said what form the payments might take, such as a check or tax credit.

There’s no certainty that the tariff revenue would be enough to cover the cost of a $2,000-per-person dividend.

Through the end of October, the federal government collected about $144bn in tariffs above the 2024 level, when tariffs were much less widespread. Tax policy specialists say tariff revenue collection could increase to more than $200bn a year if Trump’s tariffs remain in place.

But the Tax Foundation calculated that a $2,000 tariff dividend for each person earning under $100,000 would cover 150 million adult recipients and cost nearly $300bn, or more if children qualified. That’s well above the amount of money the tariffs have raised so far.

Meanwhile, a new payout would have to be approved by Congress – and lawmakers have already declined to act on that idea once, when they passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Trump’s tariff powers would also have to pass muster with the Supreme Court, which is hearing a challenge to them.

$10,000 bonuses for air traffic controllers who kept working during the shutdown

As the shutdown dragged into its second month, Trump criticised air traffic controllers who called in sick, a tactic some believe was a protest against having to work without pay. The absences hampered the commercial aviation system.

On Truth Social, Trump wrote, “For those Air Traffic Controllers who were GREAT PATRIOTS, and didn’t take ANY TIME OFF for the ‘Democrat Shutdown Hoax,’ I will be recommending a BONUS of $10,000 per person for distinguished service to our Country.”

This would require action from Congress, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy acknowledged in an X post.

Wood injury concern for England in tour match

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England have an injury concern over fast bowler Mark Wood after he suffered tightness in his left hamstring on the first day of the Ashes warm-up match against England Lions.

Wood, playing for the first time since suffering a knee injury in February, left the field midway through the second session at Lilac Hill in Perth.

The 35-year-old will have a scan on Friday. England hope he will be able to bowl on Saturday’s third and final day.

He seemed in good spirits when he left the field, joking with England Lions batter Jordan Cox, whom he had just caught on the boundary.

But any injury to Wood will be a huge worry to England given his injury record.

Wood has not played a Test since August 2024, when he was ruled out of the rest of that year because of an elbow injury.

He returned in white-ball cricket at the beginning of this year but sustained a knee injury at the Champions Trophy which subsequently required surgery.

The hamstring problem is in the same leg on which Wood had the knee operation.

The tour match against the Lions was Wood’s first cricket of any kind in nine months and his first in whites for 15 months.

Still, on a slow pitch he was immediately up to high pace, hitting 91mph in his first spell.

The England selection for the tour game appeared to hint at their plans for the first Test, with Wood part of a five-man pace attack and frontline spinner Shoaib Bashir playing for the Lions.

In recent years spin has played a diminished role in Tests in Australia, and Optus Stadium, the venue for the first Test against Australia starting on 21 November, is particularly suited to seam.

Another England pace bowler, Brydon Carse, missed the first day of the tour match through illness but is expected to join the game in the coming days.

England captain Ben Stokes claimed four wickets in the first two sessions in his first action since July.

The all-rounder has been out since missing the final Test of the series against India with a shoulder injury.

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Some damage after fire at Exeter City stadium

BBC A fire damaged portacabin. The metal is burnt and there are items on the floor black from the smoke. BBC

An investigation is being launched after a fire broke out at Exeter City’s stadium, causing some damage.

Firefighters tackled the blaze at St James Park after smoke was seen billowing from a portacabin near the Well Street end of the ground at about 22:00 GMT on Wednesday.

Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue said the fire started in an electrical unit, before spreading to a temporary building – the football club a small area of the stadium had been damaged.

The fire service initially sent three crews, and then two more as the flames were “threatening to spread to one of the stands”.

“Fire crews used breathing apparatus and hose reel jets to prevent the fire escalating,” a fire spokesperson said.

An investigation will be concluded in daylight hours, the fire service added.

A spokesperson for Exeter City Football Club said: “We will be assessing the damage today and will update when we have more information.

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