Cyclone Eloise leaves hundreds homeless in Mozambique
Cyclone Eloise made landfall in the early hours of Saturday, bringing torrential rain over the port city of Beira
Bale and Kane double up in Tottenham's dismantling of Crystal Palace Harry Kane congratulates Gareth Bales on scoring Tottenham’s second. Photograph: Julian Finney/AP
Steven Gerrard and his players ended the club’s 10-year wait for the trophy
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Manchester United 'suffered' to end City's winning run, says SolskjærUnited manager’s praise after side halt 21-game winning streakCity now lead by 11 points with 10 games remaining Manchester United players celebrate after Luke Shaw put them 2-0 ahead and on the way to derby victory at the Etihad Stadium. Photograph: Dave Thompson/Reuters
Gareth Bale and Harry Kane starred with braces to help Tottenham make it three Premier League wins in a row and boost their top four hopes after a 4-1 home success over Crystal Palace. The duo combined twice with Kane the architect for both goals by the Real Madrid loanee before the England captain hit a wonder strike and then created history with another in the 76th minute.
London [UK], March 8 (ANI): Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a British-Iranian charity worker who was in an Iranian jail for almost five years for alleged sedition charges, has finally had her ankle monitor removed. She now faces another trial on separate charges.
The irresistible royal storyline of two brothers, and their respective wives, bickering and feuding over their roles, titles, money and public profiles, is repeating itself
Harry Kane and Gareth Bale may have stolen the show as Tottenham saw off Crystal Palace 4-1 on Sunday night, but Heung-min Son ensured it was still a record-breaking night for himself and Kane. Up until now, Kane and Son's partnership has been the key attacking force for Spurs - but the recent imperious form of Bale has added another string to Jose Mourinho's bow for the Premier League run-in.
BetaShares, a leading Australian ETF manager with more than $16 billion in assets under management, today announced that it has received a significant investment from TA Associates, a leading global growth private equity firm, to fuel a major expansion of its business activities. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
‘I really haven’t slept all that much, your honour’
A sprawling camp in the Mexican city of Matamoros, a stone's throw across the river from Texas, has since 2019 been one of the most powerful reminders of the human toll of former President Donald Trump’s efforts to keep migrants out of the U.S.Once crowded with asylum seekers, just a few dozen people remain – as many have finally been allowed to cross the border to press their claim to stay in the U.S. President Joe Biden last month rolled back Trump’s Migrant Protection Protocols program, which had forced asylum seekers to wait in Mexico. As of Friday, more than 1,100 people have been permitted to enter the U.S. – with over half of those coming from the Matamoros camp, according to the U.N. refugee agency. The Trump administration touted the MPP program as part of its successful efforts to reduce immigration and cut down on what it called fraudulent asylum claims. In Matamoros, which had scant resources for migrants, families opted to sleep near the foot of the international bridge across the Rio Grande. Aid workers arrived. But so did Matamoros’ criminal groups, which doled out beatings and siphoned off donations, migrants say. Human rights groups documented kidnappings and rape in Matamoros. Occasionally, migrants’ bodies washed up along the river bank. Luz is an asylum seeker from Peru whose children are in the U.S. "I want to go support my children, so that my children can learn a lot of things, to tell them everything that has happened here in this place, so that they realize what one has had to go through and what one has to go out in search of." A U.S. official told Reuters late on Saturday that the last few people remaining in the camp were relocated to more secure locations, where they could complete the required paperwork to pursue their cases for asylum.
Olivier Dassault was killed on Sunday in a helicopter crash, a police source said, with President Emmanuel Macron paying tribute to the 69-year old conservative politician.
The former editor of the Guardian has defended its employment of IRA supporter Roy Greenslade, insisting his views were “irrelevant” to the vast majority of his output for the newspaper. Alan Rusbridger, who was in charge at the Guardian from 1995 to 2015, said he felt let down by Mr Greenslade because of his failure to be transparent about his sympathies for the armed struggle of the Republican movement. But he described criticism of the Guardian as a “red herring” insisting Mr Greenslade did not take part in editorial conferences or write about Northern Ireland issues. Last week Mr Greenslade admitted he had secretly written for Sinn Fein’s newspaper, An Phoblacht, under a pseudonym and was a supporter of the IRA bombing campaigns during the Troubles. It also emerged that he had written a column in the Guardian in 2014 in which he openly criticised an alleged IRA rape victim, accusing her of hiding an anti Sinn Fein bias. In the piece he also questioned the claims made by Maíria Cahill in an award-winning BBC documentary and accused the Corporation of lacking partiality. Writing in the Guardian, Mr Rusbridger apologised to Ms Cahill for the article, but he defended the newspaper’s long time employment of Mr Greenslade.
Harry Kane and Gareth Bale starred for Tottenham as Jose Mourinho’s side fought back to claim a 4-1 Premier League London derby win over Crystal Palace on Sunday night. Bale scored two goals - both assisted by Kane, who also scored two himself - to secure a fourth victory on the trot for Spurs in their pursuit of a top-four finish. Christian Benteke’s fine header had cancelled out Bale’s opener to send the sides into half-time level at 1-1, but the Real Madrid loanee scored a header of his own soon after the restart before Kane added a glorious third for Spurs.
The Buckingham Palace investigation into bullying will be confined solely to allegations concerning the Duchess of Sussex and will not involve any other members of the Royal family. The review will be deliberately limited in scope, focusing on a specific time period, and will invite only members of staff from the time to give evidence, The Telegraph understands. A senior royal aide denied claims that the Duchess of Cornwall or the Duchess of Cambridge would be involved, insisting that it was solely for employees. A Sunday newspaper claimed that the senior royals could be called upon to assist palace officials in the probe if participants claimed they had witnessed the offending behaviour. The Duchess of Cambridge, in particular, is said to have been unhappy with the way her sister-in-law spoke to her staff. She was once said to have been left in tears after a confrontation during Princess Charlotte’s bridesmaid dress fitting. But a well-placed source said: "Only staff will take part in this review, no one else." The investigation is expected to be led by Elisabeth Hunka, director of HR at Buckingham Palace. She could be aided by Catherine James, the treasurer of Prince Charles's household, who is responsible for HR at Clarence House. Members of staff past and present will be invited to give evidence in confidence. It has been claimed that up to a dozen aides have already lined up to take part. The Sussexes have made clear that if allegations are made against them, they expect to be formally notified and given the right of reply. However, the palace has stressed that the review is designed solely to improve internal policies and procedures and will not be treated as a “kangaroo court”. It was set up after it emerged that an official complaint had been raised about the Duchess’s behaviour by Jason Knauf, then the Sussexes’ communications secretary. In an email complaint sent in October 2018 to Simon Case, who was then the Duke of Cambridge's private secretary and is now the cabinet secretary, he said: “I am very concerned that the Duchess was able to bully two PAs out of the household in the past year. The treatment of X was totally unacceptable.” He added: “The Duchess seems intent on always having someone in her sights. She is bullying Y and seeking to undermine her confidence. We have had report after report from people who have witnessed unacceptable behaviour towards Y.”
At least 17 people have died and hundreds more have been injured in the city of Bata.
After almost 90 years of animated films, Disney has finally ventured into South East Asia.
Gerrard wants Rangers not to let up as Sturgeon condemns celebrations
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Washington [US], March 8 (ANI): The first youth poet laureate of United States, Amanda Gorman, acclaimed for her performance at President Joe Biden's inauguration, has said that she was "tailed" on her way home and confronted by a security guard who alleged that she looked suspicious.