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Sowei 2025-01-12
Coote was sacked earlier this month after the emergence of a video in which he made derogatory remarks about Liverpool and their former manager Jurgen Klopp. Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL) said that a thorough investigation had concluded he was “in serious breach of the provisions of his employment contract, with his position deemed untenable”. “Supporting David Coote continues to be important to us and we remain committed to his welfare,” PGMOL’s statement on December 9 added. Coote had the right to appeal against the decision but PA understands the Nottinghamshire referee has decided not to. The video which triggered PGMOL’s investigation into Coote’s conduct first came to public attention on November 11. In it, Coote is asked for his views on a Liverpool match where he has just been fourth official, and describes them as “s***”. He then describes Klopp as a “c***”, and, asked why he felt that way, Coote says the German had “a right pop at me when I reffed them against Burnley in lockdown” and had accused him of lying. “I have got no interest in speaking to someone who’s f****** arrogant, so I do my best not to speak to him,” Coote said. Later in the video, Coote again refers to Klopp, this time as a “German c***”. The Football Association opened its own investigation into that video, understood to be centred on that last comment and whether Coote’s reference to Klopp’s nationality constituted an aggravated breach of its misconduct rules. The investigation by PGMOL which led to Coote’s contract being terminated is also understood to have looked at another video which appeared to show Coote snorting a white powder, purportedly during Euro 2024 where he was one of the assistant VARs for the tournament. European football’s governing body UEFA also appointed an ethics investigator to look into the matter.The Taliban's supreme leader has reportedly ordered a ban on women attending nursing and midwivery institutes, closing a rare avenue they had to pursue an education beyond the sixth grade. Human Rights Watch says the ban was ordered by Taliban leader Haibatullah Akhundzada and conveyed to the Ministry of Public Health on Monday, then communicated to private medical training institutes soon after. Although the ban has yet to be formally announced, two government officials who spoke to NPR on condition of anonymity, because of the matter's sensitivity, confirmed it. In addition, several nursing and midwivery students told NPR that this week, they were not allowed to attend classes. The European Union has condemned the ban, while the United Nations chief mission in Afghanistan said it was "extremely concerned about a reported directive" that was preventing women and girls from attending private medical institutions. The state of education for girls under Taliban rule The ban reflects an ongoing Taliban effort to curtail education for girls beyond grade six. Despite the Taliban's policies, girls and women still have some options. In certain parts of the country, Taliban officials have quietly ignored the ban, allowing a small number of girls to take classes offered by private educational institutes and charities. And in February 2024, an important loophole opened for women. Officials in the Ministry of Public Health successfully lobbied the hardline Taliban leaders to allow women to take nursing and midwifery courses in a handful of mostly private training institutes and learning centers, according to Ashley Jackson , who closely tracks developments in Afghanistan as co-director of the Center on Armed Groups, a think-tank based in Switzerland. One motivation for this February decision was that in some provinces, the Taliban does not allow women to seek treatment from male medical professionals. "This new decree [banning women from nursing and midwifery training] will result in unnecessary pain, misery, sickness and death for the women forced to go without health care," said Sahar Fetrat of Human Rights Watch, in a statement. Students turned away from classes Human Rights Watch says the ban was ordered by Taliban leader, Haibatullah Akhundzada and conveyed to the Ministry of Public Health on Monday, then communicated to private medical training institutes soon after. Five Afghan women who were studying nursing and midwifery told NPR that they were turned away from their respective private institutions this week. They spoke to NPR on condition of anonymity to avoid being identified by authorities. One 22-year-old nursing student said she learned about the ban when her friends began calling to express their condolences. "Are you telling the truth?" she said she asked them. The young woman went to her institute in case her friends were misinformed. One of her teachers "told us to go home. The institute is closed until further notice," she said. One 22-year-old, who was studying economics before all women were banned from university study in 2022, told NPR she signed up for nursing classes, desperate to continue studying. She, too, rushed to her classes on Tuesday after word of the ban spread on social media, hoping it was a false rumor. She said the teachers were apologetic, "but unfortunately, we were not allowed to enter," she said. "Unfortunately, we could not do anything." "This is bad news for all Afghan people," she said angrily. "Because men cannot become midwives in Afghanistan." Men are not allowed to be midwives because of strict gender segregation customs. Challenges for medical education institutions Even before this week's news, medical education institutions have found it challenging to include women. "Medical schools have not been functioning as they should in the last three years," said Pashtana Durrani, founder of Learn Afghanistan, an organization operating secret schools in Afghanistan as well as a maternal health clinic where they trained midwives. "All they are doing now is closing any loopholes" of the ban on higher education for females, she said. "Many of us have faced increasing harassment from the authorities," she said. "In just the last two weeks, our staffs were detained and they [the Taliban] asked us for money to be allowed to stay open," she told NPR, adding that the constant harassment forced her organization's schools to transition to online lessons. "We don't have any in-person classes at all because they forced us into shutting down the last of our training program." "When we trained the younger women, I had hoped that maybe all these girls would graduate and establish their own institutions someday. But now that seems unlikely," Durrani said. "People often say that under the Taliban women are just left to reproduce. Well, now with this new ban, women are left to reproduce and then die on that same table because there will be nobody to help them. That's what it has come to," Durrani said. Indeed, Afghanistan is one of the most dangerous places in the world for a woman to give birth. According to a December 2023 statement from Stéphane Dujarric, spokesman for the U.N. Secretary-General, a woman dies every two hours across Afghanistan in birth-related complications. And the United Nations Population Fund, which tracks women's healthcare globally, reports that the country needs at least 18,000 more trained midwives to ensure basic maternal care to Afghan women. The ban on women studying basic nursing skills "makes absolutely no sense. Even according to the Taliban's own logic," says Jackson of the Center on Armed Groups. She said that even during the Taliban's rule in the 1990s, considered more extreme than the present government, they allowed women to take some medical courses. Jackson also notes that previous exceptions — allowing women to study nursing and midwivery — shows that "there are people inside the system fighting for more sensible policies who realize that Afghanistan needs midwives, it needs female doctors, it needs female nurses." But ultimately, the commands of Akhundzada, their spiritual leader, take precedence. "We know that his beliefs are radical to the extreme," Jackson says. "There's a real paranoia and a fear of losing control, and I think one of the ways that he, as well as the Taliban in the past, have expressed that, is through the control of women's bodies." Even as officials were turning away young Afghan women from health-care education this week, other Afghan women were hoping that soon, there would be some accountability for the Taliban's denial of their human rights. This week, the International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor, Karim Khan , said he could announce that " very considerable progress has already been made in the investigation of allegations of gender persecution" in Afghanistan. "I am confident that I will soon be in a position to announce concrete results," said Khan. One researcher at Human Rights Watch, Fereshta Abbasi , believes that Khan's statement indicates that he would "soon request applications for arrest warrants" for Taliban officials. Abbasi is from Afghanistan and currently lives in the United Kingdom. "Justice will prevail," she wrote on X. With additional reporting by Fariba Akbari in Paris With additional reporting by Fariba Akbari in Parisjili369 review



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The Ravens announced that tickets for a potential home wild-card playoff game at M&T Bank Stadium will go on sale Thursday at 10 a.m.UEFA Champions League: Which teams clinched playoffs and top eight this week?

Lewandowski scores his 100th Champions League goal. He is the 3rd player to reach the milestoneOn 20 November former LTTE member and former parliamentarian, ‘Pillayen’ was summoned to the CID and left after a mammoth five-hour questioning session. He was questioned in relation to the allegations made in the Channel 4 film, ‘Easter Bombings of Sri Lanka.’ Easter Sunday 2019 in Sri Lanka marked one of the worst ever co-ordinated terror attacks in the island nation. For a country that had gotten used to a 30-year civil war, the bombings that targeted churches and luxury hotels in Colombo, was a new high in terms of callousness and the death of 275 civilians. For a nation relying on inbound tourism, it was even more appalling as 43 visitors also lost their lives. The bombings had apparently caught the Sri Lankan intelligence apparatus and the Police off-guard and almost too conveniently blamed initially on Islamic extremism. Now, with the election of a new President, Anura Kumara Dissanayake “AKD” and the unprecedented majority in Parliament for his NPP party, there is renewed expectation that the new Government will approach an investigation into the Easter bombings with a real commitment towards unearthing the truth. Malcom Cardinal Ranjith is unequivocal in his call: the people he says have a right to know and in his capacity as the Head of the Roman Catholic Church in Sri Lanka, “we have a right to know because so many of our people died (and were maimed).” It appears that Sri Lanka’s new President, Anura Kumara Dissanayake (AKD as he is popularly known) shares that view. A few days after his election victory, in a poignant visit to the Katuwapitiya Church – near the tourist resort area of Negombo – where as many as 126 people died, he solemnly promised for a full and impartial enquiry. A week or so later, there was an announcement that the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) was investigating the Easter tragedy and the claims made in a documentary for Britain’s Channel 4. There are not many in Sri Lanka who doubt the new President. He has no political gain from an investigation and a robust investigation revealing the truth means he will be able to fulfil one of his election promises. Soon after the attacks the blame on Islamic extremism caused a number of internecine attacks aimed at the Muslim community in several areas and the law and order situation appeared to be under challenge. In stepped an unlikely hero in the form the Colombo’s Archbishop, Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith. The Cardinal appealed for peace and made it clear that the wider Muslim population must not be blamed. Many in Sri Lanka credit the Cardinal for having ensured that these riots did not spread – especially that the 30+ civil war had come to an end in 2009 and the country had enjoyed a relatively peaceful decade since. The investigation appeared to be going the way of Islamic extremism – especially when some weeks before there was an attack on a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand. Not many in Sri Lanka quite believed it was as simple as the Government made it out to be: within weeks of the attacks, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the former Defence Secretary in brother Mahinda’s presidency, announced his candidature for the presidency and won the ensuing Presidential election with a significant majority. His primary theme was that it was his party that understood ‘maintaining of the peace’ best. Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith led the way in suggesting there was a different explanation – he was joined by Members of Parliament, Civil Society activists and sections of the media – although all only alluded to this ‘other’ possibility driven by legalities and the near omnipresent sections of the Prevention of Terrorism Act. The call for the identification of the mastermind grew literally daily. One of the first acts President Gotabaya put into play even before the appointment of the Prime Minister and the Cabinet of Ministers, was said to have been the disbanding of the team in charge of investigation the Easter tragedy which was then led by SSP Shani Abeysekera of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID). In fact SSP Abeysekera, a highly respected officer was in effect demoted along with his transfer out of office. Incensed by the treatment meted out to him, he petitioned the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka alleging that his fundamental rights under Sri Lanka’s Constitution had been violated. His application to the Supreme Court makes for interesting reading – and it became a public document. Not many it appears would have read the contents with the exception perhaps of an international, award-winning, documentary maker who was commissioned by Channel 4. The film which was aired on Channel 4 and Danish Television raises three questions: Did Intelligence officials meet covertly with Islamic extremists before they committed the biggest terrorist attack in Sri Lanka’s history? Did Military Intelligence mislead the Police in their attempts to apprehend the terrorist group? Did Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s Government sabotage investigations into the bombings? Gotabaya Rajapaksa who had remained largely silent ever since he literally abandoned his presidential palace and embarked on a mini tour of South Asia, that included the Maldive Islands, Thailand and Singapore, broke his silence soon after the Channel 4 film (Easter Bombings of Sri Lanka 2019) and described the film as a ‘tissue of lies ... absurd’ – he has also denied having disbanded the CID team investigating the Easter bombings. The former strongman-turned President who was rejected by the people two years into his term, maintains that SSP Abeysekera was removed due to an unconnected incident. Others familiar with the timelines, maintain that Abeysekera and 30 others were removed from the investigation. A fresh investigation is likely to unearth the truth in this instance too. The principal whistleblower, a one-time, long-serving aide to ‘Pillayan’, Azad Mowlana has been accused of concocting his claim to pursue an application for a visa to settle in a European country. His claims that a senior Military Intelligence official met with the terrorist group ahead of the Easter bombings; Mowlana also claims that his former boss, Pillayan was told by Gotabaya Rajapaksa to get rid of the Sunday Leader newspaper Editor, Lasantha Wickrematunge. Wickrematunge was killed in broad daylight not far from a high-security zone in January 2009. The passage of 15 years has not resulted in a legal resolution to his unlawful killing. There is a report that Azad Mowlana had been interviewed by international agencies who are treating his claim as credible and that Mowlana had been interviewed by European intelligence agencies. Along with the fact that immigration rules have been tightened across mainland Europe, the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom not many are convinced by claims that Mowlana has been able to ‘hood-wink’ his way towards obtaining a residential visa and or the right to live and work in Europe. One person I spoke to said that perhaps it was this that was ‘a tissue of lies and absurd’. Azad Mowlana is alleged to also possess thus far undisclosed digital evidence which may assist Sri Lanka’s investigators in their quest towards the truth behind the Easter bombings of Sri Lanka. As a result of the Channel 4 film, Sri Lanka’s Government announced that a parliamentary committee would investigate the claims made in the film. Sri Lanka’s President appointed by Parliament after Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled the country, Ranil Wickremesinghe, did appoint a Presidential Committee although that committee was not formulated under the Presidential Commissions Act, depriving it of any form of quasi legality. The Committee did write to Channel 4 asking if they would assist in their enquiries – only to be told that Channel 4 had said what they did in the film and had nothing further to add. The terms of reference of that Committee has not been publicly published in any of Sri Lanka’s mainstream media outlets. An email addressed to that committee went unanswered – where the Terms of Reference was requested. Field Marshall Sarath Fonseka – Sri Lanka’s war time Army Commander – and a former Member of Parliament alluded to the ease with which intelligence officials could obtain a travel document, saying ‘this is a matter that can be done over the telephone’. He said this during a Sri Lankan parliamentary debate on the claims made by the Channel 4 film. Major General Suresh Sallay denied Azad Mowlana’s claims stating that he was in Malaysia at the time he is alleged to have met members of the terrorist group. Described as Sri Lanka’s top spy, Salley maintains he was in India on the day of the Easter bombings. There was no claim made in the film to suggest Salley was in Sri Lanka or not on the day of the Easter bombings. Salley also maintains that he was not part of the intelligence apparatus in the period January 2018 to April 2019. Following the broadcast of the film, Suresh Salley lodged a complaint with Britain’s media regulator. The regulator reported back to Salley stating that the broadcaster had not broken any of the rules he had complained of. OFCOM said in part, “Having viewed the program in its entirety alongside considering the individual elements of the complaint, we considered that, even if some of the statements complained about were inaccurate the allegations made by the whistle-blowers regarding the extent of the complainant’s involvement in the Easter bombings were not dealt with in a way that was unfair to him in the program.” International concern has been constant ever since the Easter bombings of Sri Lanka. In 2022, Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith visited the Vatican. Pope Francis issued a statement asking for the truth to be told ‘for the love of your people, for the love of justice’. An UN agency also called for an investigation into the attacks. In 2023, President Ranil Wickremesinghe told DW TV that Sri Lanka will not have any inquiry involving foreigners. Although he did not say as much, the fact is that for Sri Lanka to facilitate foreign investigators on their soil, Sri Lanka’s Parliament has not ratified international agreements that would make such an independent international investigation possible. Such anomalies are exactly what international agencies are likely to be raising with Sri Lanka’s new administration. President Dissanayake and his team have not openly refused to honour international obligations yet some of the mechanisms do not always lend themselves to full co-operation. Left alone, these anomalies can only sow greater dissatisfaction about Sri Lanka’s compliance. Easter 2025 will mark the sixth anniversary of the Easter tragedy. A new President, a new Parliament with the enviable record of being the only single party to ever gain a two-thirds majority in Parliament have all the necessary implements to ensure that a full and impartial investigation is carried out. All members of this new administration also have the distinction of not having been involved in any shape or form in the events that led to this tragedy. This tragedy has left a permanent black mark on Sri Lanka’s ability to sustain meaningful compliance of international treaties and honour in full the UN charter on the right to life. Various politicians in Sri Lanka did however join the blame game: ‘Channel 4 was against Sri Lanka’: No one pointed out any reason leaving many to dismiss this as rhetoric and one more excuse in not getting at the truth. No one in Sri Lanka’s establishment has ever sought to explain the several images and videos to emerge alleging violations of human rights; the mothers of the missing have conducted what could well be the longest ever continuous protest to no avail, there has been no move towards a sustainable resolution by at least issuing an unqualified apology followed by appropriate reparations. Perhaps after all, President AKD may well have his work cut out for him. The film raised three important questions: however, a fourth equally important question remains: why was the general public, the church administration and the hotels associations not forewarned about the impending attacks? Afterall, the Indian intelligence agency RAW had provided credible intelligence of the attack at least a fortnight previously. Who was responsible for this inaction? Was it really a coincidence that then President Sirisena and his family almost conveniently left the island to India and then onwards to a south Asian nation and avoided being in Sri Lanka on that fateful Easter Sunday? Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith must have the last word on the Easter tragedy: “We will continue with this struggle – until we know the truth”Plaid Cymru faces ‘day of reckoning’ on draft budget, says MS

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Robert Lewandowski converted a first-half penalty kick to become the third player to score 100 goals or more in the Champions League, behind Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi. Lewandowski calmly sent a low shot into the net from the spot in the 10th minute to give Barcelona a 1-0 lead against Brest. He scored his 101st goal from inside the area in second-half stoppage time to seal the Catalan's club 3-0 victory. Lewandowski trails the 129 goals of Messi and the 140 of Ronaldo, according to UEFA. Lewandowski needed 125 games to reach his milestone — two more games than Messi and 12 fewer than Ronaldo, who also scored once in the qualifying round. “I'm delighted, it's a nice number,” Lewandowski said. “In the past I didn’t think I could score more than 100 goals in the Champions League." It was Lewandowski's sixth and seventh Champions League goals this season. It's the ninth season in which the Poland striker has scored six or more goals. The 36-year-old Lewandowski is having a standout campaign, having scored 22 goals for Barcelona in 19 appearances. He is the Spanish league’s scoring leader with 15 goals from 14 matches. AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccerApple iPhone 16 Pro is available for Rs 71,050 on Flipkart; know how to grab the deal

Canadiens vs. Utah HC: Game thread, rosters, lines, and how to watch - Habs Eyes on the PrizeWhy incoming FTC chair Andrew Ferguson will ‘bring the heat on Big Tech’UK Home Office to test remote fingerprint enrolment via smartphone for entry

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