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  • Hong Kong emigres seek milk tea in craving for taste of home

    Hong Kong emigres seek milk tea in craving for taste of home

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    HONG KONG (AP) — In London, Wong Wai-yi misses the taste of home.

    A year ago, the 31-year-old musician was in Hong Kong, earning a good living composing for TV and movies and teaching piano. Today, she makes about half as much in London working part-time as a server alongside her musical pursuits. She chose the job in part because staff meals allow her to save money on food.

    It’s a difficult adjustment. And Wong, who left Hong Kong with her boyfriend in January, has turned to a beloved hometown staple to keep her grounded: milk tea. She brings the beverage to parties with Hong Kong friends and gives bottles to co-workers as gifts.

    “It’s like reminding myself I am a Hong Konger. It will be fine as long as we are willing to endure the hardships and work hard,” said Wong, who left as part of an exodus that began after Beijing passed a law in 2020 that curtailed civil liberties.

    As tens of thousands leave Hong Kong for new lives abroad, many are craving a flavor from childhood that’s become a symbol of the city’s culture: the sweet, heavy tea with evaporated milk that’s served both hot and cold at diner-like restaurants called cha chaan tengs. Workshops are popping up to teach professionals to brew tea like short-order cooks, and milk tea businesses are expanding beyond Chinatowns in Britain.

    In Hong Kong, milk tea is an unassuming beverage, something you use to wash down sweet French toast off a plastic plate. It’s so beloved that members of Hong Kong’s protest movement have called themselves part of a “Milk Tea Alliance” with activists from Taiwan, Thailand, and Myanmar, who drink similar beverages.

    Following a law that silenced or jailed most political opposition, over 133,000 residents have secured a special visa that allows them to live and work in the U.K. and apply for British citizenship after six years. Official figures have not been released on how many have gone but most recipients are expected to do so, given the visa’s cost.

    The pathway was introduced last year in response to China’s 2020 enactment of the National Security Law, which the U.K. called “a clear breach” of the 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration. The declaration included a promise to retain the former British colony’s rights and freedoms for 50 years after it was returned to China’s rule in 1997.

    Exiled activist Lee Ka-wai said that immersing himself at a Hong Kong-style cafe in London with a cup of milk tea was a “luxury.”

    The 26-year-old fled Hong Kong in March last year out of fear of being arrested. He is wanted by the city’s anti-graft body for allegedly inciting others to boycott the legislative election in December 2021. As an asylum seeker in Britain, he is not allowed to work and is living on savings.

    Even if the taste is right, he said, the feel of a cha chaan teng and the sounds of customers chatting in Cantonese cannot be replicated.

    “It’s strange because I can feel a sense of home overseas. But it also has another meaning — there’s something that cannot be replaced,” he said. “What we long for most is to go home and see a better Hong Kong. But we can’t.”

    Some emigrants, like Eric Tam, a 41-year-old manager at an insurance company, enroll in milk tea lessons before leaving. Visiting Hong Kong this month, he stocked up on a milk tea blend, a recipe that evolved from British teas in the colonial era.

    While tea is easy to find in England, he said, the taste isn’t the same: “British milk tea is just watery milk,” said Tam.

    Before moving to Liverpool with his wife and two younger daughters in June, Tam signed up for lessons at the Institution of Hong Kong Milk Tea. The two-year-old organization teaches students skills like pouring tea back and forth between a kettle and a plastic container to enhance its flavor before mixing it with evaporated milk.

    Yan Chan, the school’s founder, estimated that about 40% of the 2,000 people who have studied with her were planning to emigrate.

    Milk tea only began to emerge as a symbol of the Hong Kong identity over the last 15 years, said Veronica Mak, associate professor at the sociology department of Hong Kong Shue Yan University.

    Mak said that many young people began to think about Hong Kong identity after the government removed Queen’s Pier, a landmark from the city’s colonial past, in 2007. Childhood memories, marketing and a fashion for localism came together to make milk tea a totem of Hong Kong culture.

    “When you ask young people what kind of milk tea they like to drink, they will tell you it’s the bubble milk tea,” she said, referring to a drink from Taiwan. “But when you come to the identity part … they will not say the bubble tea but the local style milk tea.”

    Most milk tea lovers interviewed told the Associated Press that milk tea isn’t political. But Tam said it’s a form of silent resistance.

    “We can choose to preserve the culture that we want to keep. It cannot be destroyed even if other people try,” he said.

    Contemporary Asian tea culture is catching on globally. Outside Chinatowns, at least five Hong Kong-style milk tea brands have emerged over the past two years in Britain. One set up a pop-up cafe in the trendy London neighborhood of Shoreditch in September, attracting Londoners and tourists as well as Hong Kong emigres.

    Eric Wong, a tea wholesaler, began selling bottled milk tea in 2021 after moving to the UK, and offers milk tea workshops. He said he’s making 500 to 1,000 bottles of milk tea a week, and his south London business broke even after about six months. His Trini Hong Kong Style Milk Tea products are available online and at major Asian supermarkets.

    The taste of home can provoke strong emotions. A young woman from Hong Kong once shed tears after tasting his tea, Wong said.

    Between people planning to leave and growing interest in local culture, Chan is busy. On Nov. 3, nine people attended her class, none of whom had plans to emigrate.

    Cooking enthusiast Dennis Cheng had a class with her in late September and practiced the signature pouring while preparing to leave Hong Kong with his wife and children.

    He said the taste will help remind him of Hong Kong and friends back home.

    “This may help me feel emigrating overseas isn’t really that sad,” he said. “It’s just that I need more time to adapt to it.”

    ___

    Associated Press photographer Kin Cheung in London contributed to this story.

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  • Sober or bright? Europe faces holidays during energy crunch

    Sober or bright? Europe faces holidays during energy crunch

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    VERONA, Italy — Early season merrymakers sipping mulled wine and shopping for holiday decorations packed the Verona Christmas market for its inaugural weekend. But beyond the wooden market stalls, the Italian city still has not decked out its granite-clad pedestrian streets with twinkling holiday lights as officials debate how bright to make the season during an energy crisis.

    In cities across Europe, officials are wrestling with a choice as energy prices have gone up because of Russia’s war in Ukraine: Dim Christmas lighting to send a message of energy conservation and solidarity with citizens squeezed by higher utility bills and inflation, while protecting public coffers. Or let the lights blaze in a message of defiance after two years of pandemic-suppressed Christmas seasons, illuminating cities with holiday cheer that retailers hope will loosen people’s purse strings.

    “If they take away the lights, they might as well turn off Christmas,” said Estrella Puerto, who sells traditional Spanish mantillas, or women’s veils, in a small store in Granada, Spain, and says Christmas decorations draw business.

    Fewer lights are sparkling from the centerpiece tree at the famed Strasbourg Christmas market, which attracts 2 million people every year, as the French city seeks to reduce public energy consumption by 10% this year.

    From Paris to London, city officials are limiting hours of holiday illumination, and many have switched to more energy-efficient LED lights or renewable energy sources. London’s Oxford Street shopping district hopes to cut energy consumption by two-thirds by limiting the illumination of its lights to 3-11 p.m. and installing LED bulbs.

    “Ecologically speaking, it’s the only real solution,’’ said Paris resident Marie Breguet, 26, as she strolled the Champs-Elysees, which is being lit up only until 11:45 p.m., instead of 2 a.m. as in Christmases past. “The war and energy squeeze is a reality. No one will be hurt with a little less of the illuminations this year.”

    It’s lights out along Budapest’s Andrassy Avenue, often referred to as Hungary’s Champs-Elysees, which officials decided would not be bathed in more than 2 kilometers (1.5 miles) of white lights as in years past. Lighting also is being cut back on city landmarks, including bridges over the Danube River.

    “Saving on decorative lighting is about the fact that we are living in times when we need every drop of energy,’’ said Budapest’s deputy mayor, Ambrus Kiss.

    He doesn’t think economizing on lighting will dissuade tourists from coming to the city, which holds two Christmas markets that attract hundreds of thousands of visitors each year.

    “I think it’s an overblown debate,’’ he said.

    Festive lights, composed of LEDs this year, also will be dimmed from 1 a.m. to 6 a.m. in the old city center of Brasov in central Romania and switched off elsewhere, officials said.

    The crisis, largely spurred by Russia cutting off most natural gas to Europe, is sparking innovation. In the Italian mountain town of Borno, in Lombardy, cyclists will provide power to the town’s Christmas tree by fueling batteries with kinetic energy. Anyone can hop on, and the faster they pedal, the brighter the lights. No holiday lighting will be put up elsewhere in town to raise awareness about energy conservation, officials said.

    In Italy, many cities traditionally light Christmas trees in public squares on Dec. 8, the Assumption holiday, still allowing time to come up with plans for festive street displays. Officials in the northern city of Verona are discussing limiting lighting to just a few key shopping streets and using the savings to help needy families.

    “In Verona, the atmosphere is there anyway,’’ said Giancarlo Peschiera, whose shop selling fur coats overlooks Verona’s Piazza Bra, where officials on Saturday will light a huge shooting star arching from the Roman-era Arena amphitheater into the square.

    The city also will put up a Christmas tree in the main piazza and a holiday cake maker has erected light-festooned trees in three other spots.

    “We can do without the lights. There are the Christmas stalls, and shop windows are decked for the holidays,” Peschiera said.

    After two Christmases under COVID-19 restrictions, some are calling “bah humbug” on conservation efforts.

    “It’s not Christmas all year round,’’ said Parisian Alice Betout, 39. “Why can’t we just enjoy the festive season as normal, and do the (energy) savings the rest of the year?”

    The holiday will shine brightly in Germany, where the year-end season is a major boost to retailers and restaurants. Emergency cutbacks announced this fall specifically exempted religious lighting, “in particular Christmas,’’ even as environmental activists called for restraint.

    “Many yards look like something out of an American Christmas film,’’ grumbled Environmental Action Germany.

    In Spain, the northwestern port city of Vigo is not letting the energy crisis get in the way of its tradition of staging the country’s most extravagant Christmas light display. Ahead of other cities, Vigo switched on the light show Nov. 19 in what has become a significant tourist attraction.

    Despite the central government urging cities to reduce illuminations, this year’s installation is made up of 11 million LED lights across more than 400 streets — 30 more than last year and far more than any other Spanish city. In a small contribution to energy savings, they will remain on for one hour less each day.

    The lights are Mayor Abel Caballero’s pet project. “If we didn’t celebrate Christmas, (Russian President Vladimir) Putin would win,” he said.

    Caballero says the economic return is vital, both for commerce and for businesses in Vigo. Hotels in the city and the surrounding area were completely full for the launch of the lighting and are expected to be close to 100% every week.

    Germany’s Christmas markets have crunched numbers that could make any lighting Grinch’s heart grow at least three sizes.

    The market exhibitor’s association said a family Christmas market visit consumes less energy than staying home. A family of four spending an hour to cook dinner on an electric stove, streaming a two-hour film, running a video console and lighting the kids’ rooms would use 0.711 kilowatt-hour per person vs. 0.1 to 0.2 kilowatt-hour per person to stroll a Christmas market.

    “If people stay at home, they don’t sit in the corner in the dark,’’ said Frank Hakelberg, managing director of the German Showmen’s Association. “The couch potatoes use more energy than when they are out at a Christmas market.”

    ———

    Associated Press reporters Thomas Adamson in Paris; David McHugh in Frankfurt, Germany; Ciaran Gilles in Madrid; Justin Spike in Budapest; Giovanna Dell’Orto in Granada, Spain; Courtney Bonnell in London; and Stephen McGrath in Brasov, Romania, contributed.

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  • Elizabeth Taylor’s “lucky charm” Oscar dress found in suitcase in London

    Elizabeth Taylor’s “lucky charm” Oscar dress found in suitcase in London

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    A “lucky charm” Christian Dior dress worn by Elizabeth Taylor on the night she won best actress at the 1961 Oscars is to be sold at auction next month after being stored in a suitcase in London for over 50 years. It had been assumed the floral print gown with a crimson silk bloom at the waist was already in the Christian Dior archive in Paris.

    In fact, the gown – along with 11 other garments owned by the star – had been carefully stored in a large plastic suitcase in her former personal assistant’s spare room since 1971.

    Taylor, accompanied by fourth husband Eddie Fisher, wore the dress designed by Marc Bohan for Dior to the 33rd Academy Awards.

    Her relationship with Fisher, whom she was accused of stealing from actor Debbie Reynolds, was considered a scandal and had sparked a storm of negative publicity. The outcry had left Taylor convinced she would not win, said Kerry Taylor, whose specialist vintage fashion auction house is selling the dress.

    An employee poses with a Christian Dior dress worn by actor Elizabeth Taylor and recently discovered with other dresses in a suitcase, ahead of their sale at Kerry Taylor Auctions, in London on Nov. 25, 2022.

    DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images


    “She had been the bridesmaid and never the bride at the Oscars and on this occasion she really didn’t expect to win having been passed over before and having had all the negative press over Eddie Fisher,” she told AFP.

    After her Oscar triumph, the star came to regard the dress as “something of a lucky charm” and took it with her all over the world.

    “Elizabeth Taylor was still taking this dress from place to place with her after 10 years. She didn’t wear it on other occasions, she just liked to have it with her,” Taylor said.

    The garments in the suitcase were among a large number gifted to former employee Anne Sanz, whose husband Gaston worked as Taylor’s chauffeur and bodyguard. The couple traveled the world with the actor and her fellow Hollywood star husband Richard Burton at the height of their fame in the 1960s and ’70s.

    But despite the Dior dress’s sentimental value, by 1971 Taylor’s travel wardrobe was sometimes running to 40 huge suitcases and she was happy to let it go. The actor opened up her wardrobe at London’s Dorchester Hotel one day in 1971, telling Sanz “take whatever you like!” Taylor had also given Sanz a white cocktail dress and matching bolero for her wedding.

    Other items due to be sold include Tiziani haute couture by Karl Lagerfeld and a “black widow” robe Taylor wore in the 1967 film “Boom,” also by Lagerfeld.

    Taylor and Burton were godparents to the Sanzes’ daughter Elizabeth but Anne and Gaston quit after their star employers’ second separation, torn over who to continue working for.

    Over the years, Sanz wore a couple of the dresses and gave others away to friends and family, never regarding them as particularly significant or valuable.

    “Anne obviously wore the white matelasse dress for her wedding and there was one other dress that she wore – a yellow and blue dress with matching coat,” Kerry Taylor said.

    “But in a sense these were just second hand dresses that belonged to Liz Taylor. So what? This was before celebrity mentality became the thing,” she added.

    The auction at which the Dior Oscar dress is expected to fetch between £40,000-60,000 ($48,000-$73,000) will take place in London on Dec. 6.

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  • Sam Warburton: Wales need biggest reform in history | ‘I fear for Wales over next five years’

    Sam Warburton: Wales need biggest reform in history | ‘I fear for Wales over next five years’

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    “The game in Wales needs the biggest reform in its history if there are not to be repeats of the unacceptable defeat by Georgia. This situation has been brewing for some time. The system is not working. The whole thing needs to be wiped clean. Sadly, I know it won’t happen” – Warburton

    Last Updated: 23/11/22 2:07pm

    Sam Warburton has spoken about his fears for the future of Welsh rugby

    Former Wales and British and Irish Lions captain Sam Warburton has shared his thoughts and fears for the future of Welsh rugby, saying it needs the “biggest reform in history.”

    Writing for The Times on Wednesday, Warburton spoke in the wake of Wales’ embarrassing 13-12 defeat to Georgia in Cardiff – a first loss to Los Lelos.

    The loss meant Wales have suffered defeats at home to Italy and Georgia in the same year, while also having lost to Ireland, England, France, South Africa (twice) and New Zealand in 2022.

    Indeed, their only wins have come against Scotland, Argentina and a much-changed South Africa in the second of their three-Test July series, live on Sky Sports.

    The poor year under head coach Wayne Pivac, which saw them finish fifth in the Six Nations, also comes after a 2020 season which saw them lose seven of 10 Tests, beating only Italy (twice) and Georgia, finishing fifth in the Six Nations as well.

    “The game in Wales needs the biggest reform in its history if there are not to be repeats of the unacceptable defeat by Georgia last Saturday,” Warburton said.

    Wales have lost at home to Italy and Georgia in Cardiff in 2022

    Wales have lost at home to Italy and Georgia in Cardiff in 2022

    “This situation has been brewing for some time both on and off the field. The system is just not working. The whole thing needs to be wiped clean and a fresh start made. Sadly, I know it won’t happen. I know I will say these things and we will be in the same situation in 12 months.

    “I genuinely want the best for Welsh rugby. I am a Cardiff boy but if the Scarlets ended up winning the European Cup I would be over the moon. It would be amazing for Welsh rugby. I want everyone in Wales to succeed.

    “I would never let any bias towards Cardiff hinder my decision-making and that, unfortunately, is one of the problems in Welsh rugby: there is too much parochialism.

    “And the amateur game still has way too much say. Of the 12 directors on the Welsh Rugby Union’s board, there are eight community members. That is like having eight people on the board of a company that are contributing to just one part of the business. It’s just way too many.

    Warburton won two Six Nations titles with Wales in 2012 and 2013

    Warburton won two Six Nations titles with Wales in 2012 and 2013

    “There should be one community member on that board. The community game is hugely important, of course it is, and most of the people involved are well-intentioned, but it should not have eight representatives on the board of a company with a turnover of £100m. It is farcical.

    “It is a governance structure that is stuck in the Stone Age. Unless that changes, very little else will change.”

    ‘It’s such a mess…I really do fear for Wales over the next five years’

    In addition to problems in governance, Warburton pointed out how player pathways, funding disputes between the four regions – Cardiff, Dragons, Ospreys, Scarlets – and the WRU, and lack of playing depth at senior level also point to a bleak future.

    Only twice in the professional era (1995, 2010) have Wales had a worst winning percentage than this year

    Only twice in the professional era (1995, 2010) have Wales had a worst winning percentage than this year

    He added: “It is such a mess. There is little trust on either side. I don’t think the WRU trust the regions with their money and then the regions don’t want to be owned by the WRU because their governance is so old fashioned and they do not trust their decisions.

    Wales coach Wayne Pivac is under pressure after a run of just three wins in 11 games in 2022

    Wales coach Wayne Pivac is under pressure after a run of just three wins in 11 games in 2022

    “I really do fear for Wales in the next five years. They are simply not going to have the pool of players to compete, especially once the core of experienced players retire.”

    Warburton says he 'fears for Wales over the next five years'

    Warburton says he ‘fears for Wales over the next five years’

    Calls for ‘a brutally honest review’

    Speaking as a pundit on Amazon Prime post-Wales’ defeat to Georgia, Warburton pondered “underlying issues” and questioned “why aren’t the players motivated and desperate?”

    The 34-year-old, who picked up 74 caps for Wales between 2009 and 2017 before retiring injured, says drastic change needs to occur, and it needs to start with an immediate review.

    Warburton was a coach with Wales under Pivac between November 2019 and October 2020, before stepping away

    Warburton was a coach with Wales under Pivac between November 2019 and October 2020, before stepping away

    “There needs to be a very honest review now. If I was in charge at the WRU – and believe me, I am not touting for a job – I would be going around to speak to everyone in the Wales set-up and at the regions,” he said.

    “I would be saying: ‘Anonymously, please tell me everything that is good and bad.’ It needs to be brutal across the board to find the answers.”

    The former back-row captained the British and Irish Lions on two tours: Australia 2013, New Zealand 2017

    The former back-row captained the British and Irish Lions on two tours: Australia 2013, New Zealand 2017

    Sky Sports has contacted the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) for comment regarding Warburton’s claims and statements

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  • Worcester Warriors: Administrators’ report reveals full debts of more than £30m

    Worcester Warriors: Administrators’ report reveals full debts of more than £30m

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    Worcester’s debts include £16.1m in Government loans from the Covid Sports Survival plan, over £5.8m to ticket holders, suppliers, businesses and banks connected to the club, £2.1m in unpaid taxes to HMRC, £6.8m in payroll and over £2m to former owners

    Last Updated: 21/11/22 1:29pm

    A report by administrators has revealed Worcester Warriors’ debts total more than £30m

    A detailed report by administrators Begbies Traynor has revealed full Worcester Warriors debts total more than £30m, as the relegated Premiership club continue to seek a new buyer. 

    Former Worcester CEO Jim O’Toole is in pole position to complete a takeover, with the report sent to the club’s creditors revealing O’Toole and James Sandford’s consortium paid a £500,000 deposit to be able to negotiate exclusively until the end of November.

    The report also states that former Warriors owners Jason Whittingham and Colin Goldring claim they are still owed over £2m by the club.

    Other findings show that O’Toole and Sandford’s consortium have already invested more than £1m in the club, and paid off a £634,000 loan taken on land at Sixways taken by the previous owners.

    WRFC Players Ltd – the company which held the contracts of Worcester Warriors’ players and some staff – was liquidated in the High Court.

    WRFC Players Ltd - the company which held the contracts of Worcester Warriors' players and some staff - was liquidated in the High Court

    WRFC Players Ltd – the company which held the contracts of Worcester Warriors’ players and some staff – was liquidated in the High Court

    The winding-up petition heard concerned an unpaid tax bill of approximately £6m, and the result saw the contracts of Worcester’s players immediately terminated.

    Worcester then had their suspension from the rest of the Gallagher Premiership season and enforced relegation to the Championship confirmed by the RFU.

    Former owners Goldring and Whittingham were also disqualified as company directors for 12 months following a court hearing in Cardiff in October for failing to file accounts for the financial year to 28 February 2021.

    In the latest report, Begbies Traynor confirm the club owe the Government £16.1m in loans from the Covid Sports Survival plan, and still owe £2.1m in unpaid taxes to HMRC.

    Worcester and Wasps both entered administration and were relegated from the Premiership within a fortnight of each other

    Worcester and Wasps both entered administration and were relegated from the Premiership within a fortnight of each other

    Ticket holders, suppliers, businesses and banks connected to the club are also owed more than £5.8m, while WRFC Players Ltd owed £6.8m prior to being wound up.

    The administrators have also confirmed that even if the entirety of Worcester’s remaining assets were sold, the prospective funds raised would not be enough to pay off the existing debts.

    Joint-administrator Palmer said in the report that money owed to the HMRC is “highly likely” to be repaid, while the debt owed to the Government would be taken on by a future buyer.

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  • Gabrielle Union Wore a Sculptural ‘Hair Crown’ to the London Premiere of ‘Strange World’

    Gabrielle Union Wore a Sculptural ‘Hair Crown’ to the London Premiere of ‘Strange World’

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    The global press tour for Disney’s forthcoming film “Strange World,” which premieres on Nov. 23,  is well underway, and it’s already yielding some memorable fashion and beauty moments.

    On Thursday, the movie’s cast — including Gabrielle UnionJake Gyllenhaal, Jaboukie Young-White and Lucy Liu — convened in London for a premiere, which most of them took as an opportunity to have a little sartorial fun. Union chose a floor-hitting, black-and-white sequin gown from Elie Saab‘s Fall 2008 collection for the occasion. 

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  • Actor Kevin Spacey To Face 7 Additional Sex Charges In UK

    Actor Kevin Spacey To Face 7 Additional Sex Charges In UK

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    LONDON (AP) — Actor Kevin Spacey will be charged with seven further sex offenses, all against one man, piling on the pressure for one of Hollywood’s biggest stars.

    Britain’s Crown Prosecution said Wednesday that charges against the former “House of Cards” star are three of indecent assault, three of sexual assault and one of causing a person to engage in sexual activity without consent. The charges relate to incidents between 2001 and 2004.

    The prosecuting authority approved the charges following “a review of the evidence gathered by the Metropolitan Police in its investigation,″ said Rosemary Ainslie, head of the CPS Special Crime Division.

    In a July court appearance, Spacey, 63, denied charges of sexually assaulting three men a decade or more ago. That plea related to four counts of sexual assault and one count of causing a person to engage in penetrative sexual activity without consent.

    Judge Mark Wall set a date of June 6, 2023, for the trial to start and said it would last three to four weeks. It is likely to be at the Old Bailey, the venue for Britain’s highest-profile criminal trials.

    The Oscar-wining actor ran London’s Old Vic theater between 2004 and 2015.

    Spacey, who has addresses in London and the U.S., was granted bail and allowed to return to the United States after a preliminary hearing in June.

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  • NFL road trip: Beyond Germany, league eyes Spain, France

    NFL road trip: Beyond Germany, league eyes Spain, France

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    MUNICH (AP) — The NFL wants to keep its European tour going now that Germany has joined Britain in hosting games.

    Spain and France are atop the league’s wish list as it continues to look internationally for revenue growth.

    The Tampa Bay Buccaneers beat the Seattle Seahawks 21-16 on Sunday at Allianz Arena — a first for Germany as part of a four-year deal that the league hopes will extend long-term. London has hosted regular-season games since 2007.

    Beyond Germany, which could also get additional games soon, the league’s analysis of fan growth and commercial potential puts Spain and France “very much on our radar,” Brett Gosper, NFL Head of UK and Europe, told The Associated Press in an interview.

    “We need to do our homework to make sure that there is the possibility of a place to land any games in those markets, gauge interest of the host stadia, gauge interest of the host city, even the government, as to their enthusiasm to help us bring a game,” Gosper said.

    Spain has a slight edge because the Chicago Bears and Miami Dolphins now have “home marketing” rights in the country. The NFL has divvied up international rights to interested teams covering 10 countries including Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany, Ghana, Mexico and the U.K. No teams have rights in France.

    “When you know that there are teams operating in (the international rights program) you want to look at the prospect and the viability of potentially having games in those markets at some point,” Gosper said.

    There are five international games this season: three in London, one in Munich, and one in Mexico City on Nov. 21 when the Arizona Cardinals play the San Francisco 49ers.

    International expansion was one reason why the NFL added a 17th game to the schedule. The league has committed to playing four international games each season, and teams are required to play a “home” game abroad once every eight seasons.

    Outside of that commitment, a team with rights in a country can opt to play home games there, as the Jacksonville Jaguars do in London. The Jags have played nine times in the British capital and currently have a three-year deal to play an annual “home” game at the 90,000-seat Wembley Stadium.

    “A team might choose to do that. That’s a real possibility but again not imminent,” Gosper said.

    “Certainly, in next six months to 12 months we’ll be really testing the viability of our options from a stadium point of view — not just in Europe but elsewhere — and then at the same time in parallel seeing what the appetite is for clubs to potentially exploit those markets with a game,” he said.

    In Spain, Real Madrid’s Santiago Bernabéu Stadium is undergoing major renovations that will include a soccer pitch that retracts to make way for an artificial turf field that can be used for American football with a capacity over 80,000. Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, which has a long-term deal with the NFL to host London games, has a similar system. Atlético Madrid’s Wanda Metropolitano Stadium seats 68,000.

    Camp Nou is Europe’s largest soccer stadium with a capacity of 99,000, but Barcelona plans to begin a long-delayed renovation project that will last into 2026. The city’s Montjuic Olympic Stadium seats about 56,000 and was a former home to the Barcelona Dragons of the NFL Europe league.

    Gosper said there are “a lot of synergies” with Spain considering the NFL’s large Spanish-speaking fanbase. Nine teams have marketing rights in Mexico.

    The Stade de France just north of Paris has a capacity of just over 80,000 for soccer games.

    “France is a little bit outside of that and it’s its own market and culture,” Gosper said, “but at the same time it’s an incredibly strong sports media market where returns could be higher and faster than Spain.

    “They’re two very healthy media markets, healthy sports markets, some strong indicators from our streaming platform as well as from our consumer sales,” he continued. “When you mine the data a little bit, they certainly are two markets with high potential.”

    Elsewhere in Europe, the Nordic markets would be next and “Sweden in particular,” Gosper said. The country’s largest stadium, Friends Arena, tops out at 50,000 fans.

    In August 1988, the Bears played the Minnesota Vikings in a preseason game at Ullevi Stadium in Gothenburg.

    ___

    AP NFL coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

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  • King Charles III leads Remembrance Sunday to honor veterans

    King Charles III leads Remembrance Sunday to honor veterans

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    LONDON (AP) — The U.K fell silent for two minutes on Remembrance Sunday as King Charles III led the nation in honoring servicemen and women who lost their lives in past conflicts.

    Big Ben chimed 11 times to mark the start of the silence as thousands of veterans, including some who had served during the World War II looked on solemnly under gray London skies.

    Their number gets fewer each year – adding poignancy to the appearance of Charles, leading the ceremony for the first time since the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth II in September. She had served as a mechanic and truck driver during the last months of World War II, and continued to join the annual commemoration in London well into her 90s.

    The veterans, with brightly shined shoes and medals gleaming on their lapels, watched Charles lay a newly designed wreath of poppies at the foot of the Cenotaph, London’s war memorial. Other royals, including the Prince of Wales and the Earl of Wessex, as well as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and the leader of the opposition also laid wreaths.

    Many thousands thronged the streets of London to watch the occasion and join in the silence, though they applauded when 10,000 veterans later marched past.

    Remembrance Sunday is marked every year in the U.K. on the closest Sunday to Armistice Day on Nov. 11 with the wearing of poppies and a national two-minute silence observed at 11 a.m. It marks the moment the guns fell silent in 1918 at the end of World War I.

    Officials said this year’s service is dedicated both to fallen soldiers in wars past and to Ukrainians fighting against Russia’s invasion.

    “We must never forget those who gave their lives in defense of our values and our great nation,” said Defense Secretary Ben Wallace. “All of us will also be thinking of those brave Ukrainians who are fighting for their very own survival to defend freedom and democracy for all, just as the U.K. and Commonwealth soldiers did in both world wars.”

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  • King Charles leads Remembrance Sunday service for first time

    King Charles leads Remembrance Sunday service for first time

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    LONDON — Britain will pause for a two-minute silence Sunday to remember the nation’s war dead as King Charles III leads a Remembrance Day service for the first time as monarch.

    Charles and other royals and senior politicians will lay wreaths at the Cenotaph, the national war memorial in central London, to pay tribute to the sacrifices made by fallen servicemen and women. Remembrance Sunday is marked every year in the U.K. on the closest Sunday to Armistice Day on Nov. 11 with the wearing of poppies and a national two-minute silence observed at 11 a.m.

    Big Ben, which has undergone five years of repairs, will be struck 11 times to mark the start of the silence.

    Around 10,000 veterans — including 100-year-old World War II veterans and those who served in recent conflicts including in Afghanistan — will take part in a solemn march, and thousands of people are expected to line the streets to watch the service.

    This year’s ceremony is especially poignant for Britain’s royal family because it marks the first Remembrance Day since the death of Queen Elizabeth II, who considered the day one of the most important engagements in her royal calendar.

    Elizabeth, who died on Sept. 8 at 96 years old, lived through World War II and only missed seven Cenotaph services during her long reign. Beginning in 2017, Charles began laying a wreath on his mother’s behalf as she watched from a nearby balcony, in a subtle shift of head-of-state duties as Elizabeth entered her twilight years.

    Officials said this year’s service is dedicated both to fallen soldiers in wars past and to Ukrainians fighting against Russia’s invasion.

    “We must never forget those who gave their lives in defence of our values and our great nation,” said Defense Secretary Ben Wallace. “All of us will also be thinking of those brave Ukrainians who are fighting for their very own survival to defend freedom and democracy for all, just as the U.K. and Commonwealth soldiers did in both world wars.”

    Charles will lay a newly designed poppy wreath incorporating a ribbon of his racing colours. Wreath designers say it also pays tribute to the racing colors used by both Elizabeth and his grandfather King George VI.

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  • Ex-guard at UK’s Berlin embassy admits spying for Russia

    Ex-guard at UK’s Berlin embassy admits spying for Russia

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    LONDON — A former security guard at the British embassy in Berlin has admitted spying for Russia and faces up to 14 years in prison.

    David Ballantyne Smith, 58, pleaded guilty to eight charges under the Official Secrets Act. Prosecutors say he gave Gen. Maj. Sergey Chukhurov, Russia’s military attache in Berlin, information about the activities, identities, addresses and phone numbers of British civil servants.

    Smith also collected intelligence, some of it classed secret, on the operation and layout of the embassy, which prosecutors said would be useful to “an enemy, namely the Russian state.”

    Smith admitted guilt during a hearing last week at London’s Central Criminal Court, but the pleas were covered by reporting restrictions until Friday, when prosecutors dropped a ninth charge that Smith had denied.

    Prosecutors say Smith was motivated by a hatred of Britain and its embassy, where he had worked for eight years, and had expressed sympathy with Russian authorities. They claim he was angry that the embassy flew the rainbow flag in support of the LGBTQ+ community.

    Smith’s lawyer, Matthew Ryder, said his client denied prosecutors’ description of “why he did what he did and the seriousness of the allegations.” He said Smith did not have “a negative intention towards the U.K.”

    Smith was arrested by German police at his home in Potsdam, southwest of Berlin in August 2021 and extradited to the U.K. in April.

    He will be sentenced at a later date and faces a maximum 14-year sentence.

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  • Jack van Poortvliet says England must avoid ‘overthinking’ against Japan after Argentina loss

    Jack van Poortvliet says England must avoid ‘overthinking’ against Japan after Argentina loss

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    Jack van Poortvliet adds that England will be tuning in to support the Red Roses as they face New Zealand in the World Cup Final on Saturday morning.

    Last Updated: 11/11/22 2:17pm

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    England’s men’s rugby team lead the good luck messages for the Red Roses who take on New Zealand in the World Cup Final at Eden Park.

    England’s men’s rugby team lead the good luck messages for the Red Roses who take on New Zealand in the World Cup Final at Eden Park.

    Jack van Poortvliet insists England aim to play with freedom when they evoke the spirit of their summer tour to Australia to revive their autumn.

    Eddie Jones’ side host Japan at Twickenham on Saturday with the goal of delivering an immediate response after falling 30-29 to Argentina, their first loss to the Pumas since 2009.

    Knowing they are on the back foot with New Zealand and South Africa next up in the Autumn Nations Series, they have used their experiences Down Under in July as inspiration.

    The tour ended with a 2-1 series victory but only once England had recovered from collapsing to defeat in the opener by producing an emphatic high-octane victory in Brisbane that had shades of the 2019 World Cup.

    Van Poortvliet, the 21-year-old rookie who has replaced Leicester team-mate Ben Youngs at scrum-half, believes a fast start will help address any hesitancy.

    Scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet says the men's rugby team are 'incredibly proud' of the Red Roses and that they will be tuning in to watch as they take on New Zealand in the World Cup Final.

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    Scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet says the men’s rugby team are ‘incredibly proud’ of the Red Roses and that they will be tuning in to watch as they take on New Zealand in the World Cup Final.

    Scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet says the men’s rugby team are ‘incredibly proud’ of the Red Roses and that they will be tuning in to watch as they take on New Zealand in the World Cup Final.

    “There has been an appreciation of the common things in both first Tests – the one against Argentina last weekend and the one against Australia. We have spoken about them and addressed them,” Van Poortvliet said.

    “We have a clear focus. We want to free ourselves up, play with real excitement and make sure we are not overthinking things. We want to be excited by the challenge.

    “To free yourself up you have got to be on the front foot and our challenge is how can we get on the front foot early.

    “It’s a mindset and for us we want to hit the ground running and bring that real physicality and aggression.”

    England’s attack failed to ignite against Argentina, a recurring shortcoming that is in urgent need of fixing with the World Cup only 12 Tests away.

    Attack coach Martin Gleeson insists the greatest concern was not finishing off the chances created and rejected the notion that players operate in a straitjacket of pre-programmed instructions.

    Scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet says England's defeat against Argentina didn't 'tarnish' his debut.

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    Scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet says England’s defeat against Argentina didn’t ‘tarnish’ his debut.

    Scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet says England’s defeat against Argentina didn’t ‘tarnish’ his debut.

    “We want to attack better this week and be a little more direct, and then when the opportunities come out wide we want to take them,” Gleeson said.

    “The pleasing thing is we are getting in those areas and we are causing teams problems. It’s just that last little bit of the puzzle that we’re working on.

    “We’re working hard on that and I don’t think we’re too far away. The more the players play together and the more experienced they are, the better we will get.

    “No one ever speaks about errors here, no one ever speaks about making mistakes. We want to be as aggressive as we can with our attack. No one says otherwise, there’s a bit of a preconception about that.

    “We want the boys to play what they see and be as aggressive and full of intent as they can be.

    “Of course they can go off script. We want to play a certain way, which is what we’re building from the summer, but if players see something they’ve got to take it – we want to take it.”

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  • Indian diamond billionaire Nirav Modi loses appeal against extradition from UK | CNN

    Indian diamond billionaire Nirav Modi loses appeal against extradition from UK | CNN

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    London
    CNN
     — 

    A London court on Wednesday rejected an appeal from Indian billionaire Nirav Modi against his extradition from the United Kingdom to India to face charges of fraud and money laundering.

    British police arrested the diamond dealer in 2019 in London over his alleged involvement in a bank fraud that could be worth $2 billion.

    Modi’s lawyers last year challenged a court order allowing the British government to extradite the fugitive businessman, citing his mental health and risk of suicide.

    London’s High Court dismissed the appeal on Wednesday, saying Modi’s risk of suicide does not rule out his extradition.

    Justice Jeremy Stuart-Smith, one of the two judges, said that they were “far from satisfied that Mr Modi’s mental condition and the risk of suicide are such that it would be either unjust or oppressive to extradite him,” according to the court ruling.

    “On the basis of the assurances that the (Indian government) has given, we accept that there will be suitable medical provision and an appropriate plan in place for the management and medical care of Mr Modi, which will be provided in the knowledge that he is a suicide risk,” the judges said.

    Modi’s alleged fraud first came to light in 2018 when Punjab National Bank, one of India’s largest banks, reported fraudulent activity at one of its branches.

    India then issued an Interpol Red Notice for Modi’s arrest and London authorities were asked to execute it. The Indian foreign ministry said in a statement at the time that it welcomed the arrest, and would seek to extradite Modi as soon as possible.

    Modi and officials at the bank allegedly issued fraudulent Letters of Undertakings to overseas banks to obtain buyer’s credit, according to India’s Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

    Forbes once ranked Modi as India’s 85th richest man, with a net worth of $1.8 billion.

    CNN has reached out to his lawyer after the court’s decision on Wednesday but is yet to hear back.

    Modi, who remains at Wandsworth Prison in London, can challenge Wednesday’s court ruling at the UK Supreme Court.

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  • Backstreet Boys pay emotional tribute to

    Backstreet Boys pay emotional tribute to

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    The Backstreet Boys paid an emotional tribute to Aaron Carter, the younger brother of group member Nick Carter, during their concert in London on Sunday. The younger Carter was found dead on Saturday in a California home.

    “The next song is about family,” band member Kevin Richardson said while the group performed at O2 Arena in London.

    “We all grew up together. We’ve been through highs and lows, ups and downs, you guys have been through it with us,” he said. “Tonight, we’ve got a little bit of heavy hearts because we lost one of our family members yesterday.” 

    As Richardson continued, Aaron’s older brother, Nick Carter, started to cry on stage. 

    GRAMMY Style Studio - Day Three
    A.J. McClean and Brian Littrell of the Backstreet Boys and Aaron Carter

    Amy Graves/WireImage


    “We just wanted to find a moment in our show to recognize him. Nick’s little brother, Aaron Carter passed away yesterday,” Richardson continued. “He’s a part of our family and we thank you guys for all your love, all your well wishes and all your support.” 

    “We’d like to dedicate this next song to our little brother, Aaron Carter,” Brian Littrell said, moments before the group performed their 2019 song, “Breathe.” 

    The Backstreet Boys were touring for their ninth studio album, “DNA,” upon news of the younger Carter’s death. He was found unresponsive in a bathtub on Saturday by a house sitter. Paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene, and authorities are investigating.    


    Backstreet Boys TRIBUTE to Aaron Carter | Nick Carter CRYING at Concert by
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    The 34-year-old rose to fame in the early 2000s as he followed in his older brother’s footsteps in the music industry. He became loved among teens for dozens of songs, including “That’s How I Beat Shaq” and “I Want Candy.” At one point, he toured with the Backstreet Boys, who debuted in the ’90s.  

    The elder Carter posted about his brother’s death hours before the show in London on Sunday, saying his “heart is broken.” 

    “Even though my brother and I have had a complicated relationship, my love for him has never ever faded,” he said. “I have always held on to the hope that he would somehow, someday want to walk a healthy path and eventually find the help that he so desperately needed.” 

    Carter went on to say that “addiction and mental illness” are the villains in his younger brother’s death. Aaron Carter had been open about his struggles with substance abuse and mental illness. In 2019, Nick Carter and Aaron’s twin sister, Angel, filed a restraining order against their brother after he allegedly confessed “that he harbors thoughts and intentions of killing my pregnant wife and unborn child,” Nick tweeted at the time.  

    “I will miss my brother more than anyone will ever know,” Nick Carter posted on Sunday. “I love you Chizz. Now you can finally have the peace you could never find here on earth….I love you baby brother.”

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  • UK to declare bank holiday May 8 to honor King Charles III

    UK to declare bank holiday May 8 to honor King Charles III

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    LONDON (AP) — The United Kingdom will have another reason to celebrate the coronation of King Charles III, for the government has declared a special public holiday to mark the occasion.

    The holiday will be on Monday, May 8, capping a three-day weekend that will begin with the coronation. The coronation of Charles’ late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, was also marked with what is known as a bank holiday in Britain.

    “The coronation of a new monarch is a unique moment for our country. In recognition of this historic occasion, I am pleased to announce an additional bank holiday for the whole United Kingdom next year,” new Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said. “I look forward to seeing people come together to celebrate and pay tribute to King Charles III by taking part in local and national events across the country in his honor.”

    Charles will be crowned on May 6 at Westminster Abbey in London. His ceremony will be designed to preserve the historical traditions of the monarchy while looking to the future following the late queen’s 70-year reign. The coronation is expected to be shorter and less extravagant than the three-hour ceremony that installed Elizabeth in 1953, in keeping with Charles’ plans for a slimmed-down monarchy.

    The coronation holiday means May will have three long weekends next year, with traditional bank holidays already scheduled for May 1 and May 29.

    ___

    Follow all AP stories on British royalty at https://apnews.com/hub/queen-elizabeth-ii

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  • Special Report: Procession of Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin to Westminster to lie in state

    Special Report: Procession of Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin to Westminster to lie in state

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    Special Report: Procession of Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin to Westminster to lie in state – CBS News


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    A solemn procession through the streets of London brought Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall to lie in state. Norah O’Donnell anchors CBS News Special Report coverage from London.

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  • UK to declare bank holiday May 8 to honor King Charles III

    UK to declare bank holiday May 8 to honor King Charles III

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    LONDON — The United Kingdom will have another reason to celebrate the coronation of King Charles III, for the government has declared a special public holiday to mark the occasion.

    The holiday will be on Monday, May 8, capping a three-day weekend that will begin with the coronation. The coronation of Charles’ late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, was also marked with what is known as a bank holiday in Britain.

    “The coronation of a new monarch is a unique moment for our country. In recognition of this historic occasion, I am pleased to announce an additional bank holiday for the whole United Kingdom next year,’’ new Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said. “I look forward to seeing people come together to celebrate and pay tribute to King Charles III by taking part in local and national events across the country in his honor.”

    Charles will be crowned on May 6 at Westminster Abbey in London. His ceremony will be designed to preserve the historical traditions of the monarchy while looking to the future following the late queen’s 70-year reign. The coronation is expected to be shorter and less extravagant than the three-hour ceremony that installed Elizabeth in 1953, in keeping with Charles’ plans for a slimmed-down monarchy.

    The coronation holiday means May will have three long weekends next year, with traditional bank holidays already scheduled for May 1 and May 29.

    ———

    Follow all AP stories on British royalty at https://apnews.com/hub/queen-elizabeth-ii

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  • Police deal with ‘disturbance’ involving armed detainees at London immigration center | CNN

    Police deal with ‘disturbance’ involving armed detainees at London immigration center | CNN

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    London
    CNN
     — 

    Police were deployed to an immigration center near London Saturday following what they called a “disturbance.”

    Detainees inside the facility had armed themselves with knives and lumps of wood, CNN has learned.

    A spokesperson from the UK’s Home Office told CNN Saturday there had been a power outage at the Harmondsworth immigration removal center “and work is currently underway to resolve this issue.”

    They added “the welfare and safety of staff and individuals detained at Harmondsworth is our key priority.”

    Officers arrived at the Harmondsworth facility on Friday evening to “provide support to staff dealing with a disturbance” and remain there as of Saturday morning, a spokesperson for the city’s Metropolitan Police told CNN.

    There have been no reported injuries from the site, CNN has learned.

    It comes as the UK’s Home Office is under fire for its treatment of migrants and asylum-seekers, with London Mayor Sadiq Khan calling for an “urgent review.”

    A separate incident in which a man threw “crude incendiary devices” at Western Jet Foil Home immigration center in the southern English port of Dover last Sunday was motivated by extremism, police said.

    The UK’s counter-terrorism police department (CTPSE) said in a statement Saturday that the attack was motivated by a “terrorist ideology.”

    “After considering the evidence collected so far in this case, whilst there are strong indications that mental health was likely a factor, I am satisfied that the suspect’s actions were primarily driven by an extremist ideology. This meets the threshold for a terrorist incident,” said Tim Jacques, Senior National Coordinator for Counter Terrorism Policing.

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  • Autumn Internationals: Ireland captain Johnny Sexton implores Ireland to keep on evolving

    Autumn Internationals: Ireland captain Johnny Sexton implores Ireland to keep on evolving

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    Ireland take on world champions South Africa in their first fixture of the Autumn Nations Series on Saturday at 5.30pm; Andy Farrell’s team will also face Fiji and Australia at the Aviva Stadium on successive weekends

    Last Updated: 02/11/22 11:17am

    Ireland start their autumn campaign against South Africa on Saturday

    Captain Johnny Sexton says Ireland must keep on evolving during the Autumn Internationals as the next Rugby World Cup comes into focus.

    The in-form Irish are preparing to begin their autumn campaign against world champions South Africa, having shot to the top of the global rankings following a historic summer series win in New Zealand.

    With the start of the 2023 tournament in France just over 10 months away, fly-half Sexton has credited the Irish coaching staff with increasing competition for places and not allowing established players to slide into their comfort zones.

    Head coach Andy Farrell has been training with a squad of 49 in Dublin ahead of Saturday’s showdown with the Springboks, which is preceded by Friday evening’s fixture between an Ireland A team and an All Blacks XV.

    Ireland’s Autumn Internationals

    Saturday, November 5 Ireland vs South Africa 5.30pm
    Saturday, November 12 Ireland vs Fiji 1pm
    Saturday, November 19 Ireland vs Australia 8pm

    “You’ve got to keep evolving, you’ve got to keep getting better,” Sexton said. “If you stay the same, other teams will pass you out.

    “We need to build a real competition for places so that no one can get comfortable and that is exactly what the coaches are doing.

    “They’re challenging us in how we play the game, they’re challenging us by putting all these extra fixtures in, with the Emerging Ireland tour, the Maori games, now the New Zealand A game, so all these guys are getting chances to impress the coaches and to play under the coaches, to listen and put what the coaches want out on the pitch.

    “There were 50 players at training, and I was thinking to myself 20 of them are going to be left at home for the World Cup.

    “And I couldn’t pick who is going to be left at home, there are going to be some good players left out.

    “That’s exactly where we want to be and keep cultivating. Those are the lessons we learnt that we’re implementing.”

    Ireland approach the autumn following a highly successful summer in New Zealand

    Ireland approach the autumn following a highly successful summer in New Zealand

    Ireland and South Africa are poised to lock horns for the first time in five years before meeting again next September at the World Cup.

    While the pool stage fixture in Paris adds an extra dimension to the weekend clash, Sexton insists his attention is almost exclusively on short-term matters.

    “I’m just trying to focus on what is straight in front of me,” said the 37-year-old Leinster player.

    “I haven’t thought too much about the bigger picture. It’s a driving factor, but it’s not something I think about this week, for example.

    “We have spoken about the World Cup of course and have that as the goal so we are always building towards that.

    “We don’t refer to it week on week. It is very much focused on South Africa this week.”

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  • Rare Mughal era pashmina carpet sold at auction for over 5 million pounds

    Rare Mughal era pashmina carpet sold at auction for over 5 million pounds

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    The beauty of auctions is that sometimes they give you a chance to own a piece of history. And that’s exactly what happened last week in London, when at a Christie’s auction an exceptionally rare pashmina carpet woven for the court of Emperor Shah Jahan in circa 1650 came under the hammer. After a competitive telephone bidding that lasted over 10 minutes, it was sold for £5,442,000.  

    The carpet that is only one of four 17th century pashmina carpets remaining in private hands, has a lattice and flower design and still retains its brilliant colour and design. It’s woven with prized pashmina goat hair on a silk foundation.  

    The 9 feet by 8 feet carpet had an estimated price of £2.5 million to £3.5 million, but finally sold for almost double that. The carpet which is now almost square was earlier over 14 feet long. Three smaller fragments from the same carpet are known to have survived, two are in museums, the third is privately owned. 

    “Due to the fragility of the silk and the finely spun pashmina pile very few examples survive, making a carpet of this size and condition an extraordinarily rare survivor from the golden age of Imperial Mughal carpet production,” said a Christie’s press release.  

    The carpet was a highlight in Art of the Islamic & Indian Worlds including Oriental Rugs and Carpets sale which totalled £15,989,352. The auction comprised 265 lots, including works of art, paintings, carpets and manuscripts from the 9th through to the 20th century, and from Spain to India. 

    As per Christie’s, this carpet is an important example of the new Flower Style in Mughal India which became popular in architectural decoration and the decorative arts under Shah Jahan (r. 1628-58). The style is distinguished by a wide range of flowers – roses, lilies, carnations and sunflowers among others — depicted in profile and arranged in rows. The Flower Style in Indian art can be traced back to the 1620 visit of Mughal Emperor Jahangir (r.1605-27) to Kashmir. Mansur, his favourite natural history painter, accompanied him on the trip and produced more than 100 paintings of local flowers, three of which survive. However, it was not until after 1630 that the vast majority of court carpets woven in India reflected the new taste for the Flower Style which dominated carpet design as well as all aspects of Mughal art.     

    Also read: Have deployed a standalone 5G network to leapfrog ahead: Reliance Jio

    Also read: Bid for World’s largest flawless diamond weighing over 300 carats is just $1

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