War at home is taking its toll on the only Palestinian athlete at the Paralympic Games

War at home is taking its toll on the only Palestinian athlete at the Paralympic Games
Palestinian Paralympic athlete Fadi Aldeeb talks during an interview outside the Paralympic village in Saint-Denis, France, on Sept. 2, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 04 September 2024
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War at home is taking its toll on the only Palestinian athlete at the Paralympic Games

Palestinian Paralympic athlete Fadi Aldeeb talks during an interview outside the Paralympic village in Saint-Denis, France.
  • The only Paralympian in the Palestinian delegation in Paris, Aldeeb feels he bears special responsibility to represent all Palestinians living in Gaza, the West Bank and elsewhere
  • “I’m their voice. And I want to talk and talk and talk,” the Gaza native told AP

PARIS: Fadi Aldeeb got the competing out of the way early at the Paralympic Games. He’s been using the rest of the time to talk.
The only Paralympian in the Palestinian delegation in Paris, Aldeeb feels he bears special responsibility to represent all Palestinians living in Gaza, the West Bank and elsewhere. He tries not to think about his own situation.
“I’m their voice. And I want to talk and talk and talk,” the Gaza native told The Associated Press in an interview this week.
The 40-year-old Aldeeb, who uses a wheelchair, was the Palestinian flag bearer during the Games’ opening ceremony, two days before he placed last in the men’s shot put for seated athletes with a season best throw of 8.81 meters.
The winner, world record holder Ruzhdi Ruzhdi, returned to Bulgaria with his gold medal, but Aldeeb has stayed around the Paralympic Village, speaking to media about the desperate situation in his homeland following Israel’s retaliatory offensive in Gaza after Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking about 250 hostages.
After nearly 11 months of fighting, the war has killed more than 40,000 Palestinians, according to local health officials, who say about half of the dead are women and children. It has displaced the vast majority of Gaza’s 2.3 million people, often multiple times. It has plunged the besieged territory into a humanitarian catastrophe, including new fears of a polio outbreak.
Aldeeb said he lost his younger brother on Dec. 6 when the building containing the family home in the Gaza City neighborhood of Shijaiyah was bombed and destroyed.
Aldeeb, who besides competing in shot put is a professional wheelchair basketball player, was playing a French league match and only saw afterward he’d received many missed calls from the brother. There was no connection when he tried calling back. Another brother told him the next day he had been killed.
Aldeeb said it made him question why he plays sport. He said the image of his brother comes to him at night and he often wonders what he was trying to say when he called during the league match.
“I received a call from his daughter, she’s like, 7 years old. I never ever can forget this,” Aldeeb said, fighting tears. “She asked me, ‘My uncle, I know he’s died and he goes – Inshallah – to Jannah, but I want his body. I don’t need his body to stay under the building, and the dogs start eating his body.’ Imagine, a child 7 years old, speaking like this.”
Aldeeb said other family members decided to scatter around the Gaza Strip to maximize their chances of survival.
“If they stay together, it’s all too easy that all of this family disappears and is killed,” he said.
Aldeeb said he hasn’t seen his own wife and children for two years because they’re still in Turkiye, where he moved from Gaza in 2016 to play basketball. They can’t get a visa to join him in France, and he says he can’t get a visa to join them in Turkiye without going to Gaza.
“Sometimes, you keep your feelings inside of yourself because you don’t want to show yourself, like, weak or something like that. You want to keep going because you have a big goal. You want to have it, but at the same time when you’re alone, yeah, you’re crying, you’re human,” he said.
Aldeeb said he received his life-changing injury on Oct. 4, 2001. He said he was shot in the back by an Israeli sniper when soldiers responded with bullets after some kids threw stones at an Israeli tank.
The current war is creating many more potential Paralympians, but Aldeeb said all Palestinian athletes face a lack of facilities and equipment – and difficulties leaving.
The 3 million Palestinians in the West Bank live under seemingly open-ended military rule, and Gaza’s borders have been sealed for months. Even before the war, athletes struggled to leave the territory for international competitions because of an Israeli-Egyptian blockade imposed after the Hamas militant group seized power in 2007.
Aldeeb wants to see future Palestinian delegations at Paralympic and Olympic competitions grow.
“We have in Gaza something the world doesn’t have – the type of players, the type of athletes. What they need are just little programs. You cannot imagine what they can do,” Aldeeb said. “I hope they can get this opportunity before they are killed, I hope.”


Sharjah Warriorz stun MI Emirates to secure DP World ILT20 clash against Desert Vipers

Sharjah Warriorz stun MI Emirates to secure DP World ILT20 clash against Desert Vipers
Updated 6 sec ago
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Sharjah Warriorz stun MI Emirates to secure DP World ILT20 clash against Desert Vipers

Sharjah Warriorz stun MI Emirates to secure DP World ILT20 clash against Desert Vipers
  • Warriorz set for showdown in attempt to claim spot in Sunday’s final

ABU DHABI: Sharjah Warriorz secured a six-wicket victory over defending champions MI Emirates in the DP World ILT20 Eliminator on Thursday, setting up a clash with Desert Vipers for a place in the final against Dubai Capitals.

A blistering cameo from Tim Seifert (40 off 20 balls) and a disciplined bowling effort, led by Tim Southee, helped the Warriorz past MI Emirates’ modest total of 146 for eight at Sheikh Zayed Stadium. The win ensures new champions will be crowned in the third season of ILT20 as both previous title holders have now been knocked out.

Chasing 147, Sharjah got off to a flying start, with Tom Kohler-Cadmore and Johnson Charles racking up 23 runs in the first two overs.

Charles, who was in sublime form, struck 36 off 20 balls before falling to young UAE pacer Muhammad Rohid, who made an immediate impact with two crucial wickets in the 13th over.

Despite this setback, the Warriorz remained in control, thanks to Kohler-Cadmore’s steady knock (40 off 40) and Seifert’s late onslaught. The New Zealand wicketkeeper-batter sealed the win in style, hammering 16 runs in the 19th over.

MI Emirates had earlier struggled to build momentum after losing Andre Fletcher in the opening over. Tom Banton (29) and Nicholas Pooran (42 off 19) provided some resistance, with Pooran becoming only the third batter to surpass 1,000 ILT20 runs.

However, disciplined spells from Dilshan Madushanka and Southee kept the Emirates in check, with the defending champions ultimately restricted to a below-par total.

Reflecting on the defeat, Pooran, the captain of MI Emirates, said: “We were below par; we put ourselves in a hole. It was difficult to defend on this surface where there wasn’t much assistance for the bowlers.

“Our bowlers tried very hard; credit must be given to them. They (Warriorz) took their chances. We didn’t have an answer for them. Congrats to them. You get what you deserve; we haven’t been consistent. Looking forward to next year.”

Player of the match Seifert praised his side’s efforts, and added: “(It’s) always nice to get to that winning position. Our bowlers did a great job. (There is a) big semifinal coming up. Hopefully we can make it to the final.”


PSG’s crushing domination leaves no hope for domestic rivals

PSG’s crushing domination leaves no hope for domestic rivals
Updated 10 min 22 sec ago
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PSG’s crushing domination leaves no hope for domestic rivals

PSG’s crushing domination leaves no hope for domestic rivals
  • PSG have not lost to French opponents in 27 games stretching back to last May
  • The first leg takes place in Brittany next Tuesday, with the return in Paris on Feb. 19

PARIS: Paris Saint-Germain head into the Champions League knockout phase in rude health, with their crushing domination against domestic opposition making a Ligue 1 and French Cup double look highly likely and leaving them in a strong position to keep advancing in Europe.
Luis Enrique’s team head into Friday’s home clash with Monaco with a 10-point lead over Marseille at the top of Ligue 1, with the principality side a further three points behind in third.
Even a slip-up in that game against another of France’s Champions League representatives is unlikely to stop them in their procession toward a fourth straight league title, and their 11th in 13 seasons.
In midweek they eased to an uneventful 2-0 win away to third-tier Le Mans to secure a place in the French Cup quarter-finals.
The fact that almost all of their most serious rivals domestically have already been eliminated from that competition means it would be an enormous surprise if the Parisians did not now claim a record-extending 16th French Cup triumph.
PSG have not lost to French opponents in 27 games stretching back to last May, when they were beaten 3-1 at home by Toulouse having already secured the Ligue 1 title.
That is their only loss in their last 60 meetings with domestic opponents since September 2023, a record which speaks volumes for their absolutely enormous financial advantage over the rest of French football.
The Qatar-owned club’s revenue for 2024 of almost 806 million euros ($837m) put them third in the world, behind only Real Madrid and Manchester City, in analysts Deloitte’s recently published Football Money League.
The only other French clubs in the top 30 were Marseille and Lyon, whose combined revenue totalled 551 million euros.
Put simply, no wonder PSG’s French rivals cannot compete, and it does not augur well for Brest, who must now face Luis Enrique’s team in the knockout phase play-offs of the Champions League.
The first leg takes place in Brittany next Tuesday, with the return in Paris on Feb. 19.
Brest’s entire budget for this season is reported to be just under 50 million euros.
All of which means PSG should make it through to the last 16 in Europe, where either Liverpool or Barcelona await.
Meanwhile in Paris the possibility is already being raised of PSG going through the entire season without losing a game domestically.
“Records are not an objective for us,” said Luis Enrique on Friday when asked about the possibility of establishing that new record.
“What is important is to win titles. If those come with records, that is marvellous, but that is not the aim.”
The 27-year-old’s transformation from a devilish dribbler on the wing to lethal central striker has been remarkable.
The France international has scored 14 goals in his last nine appearances for PSG, going back to mid-December. Prior to that he had scored 11 times in 59 games for the capital club since arriving from Barcelona in 2023.
Dembele scored back-to-back hat-tricks against VfB Stuttgart, in the Champions League, and Brest before being rested for the win at Le Mans in midweek to keep him fresh for the coming games.
He became the first player in PSG history to score hat-tricks in successive matches — something the likes of Kylian Mbappe, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Edinson Cavani, Neymar and Lionel Messi were all unable to achieve.


England to play Afghanistan in Champions Trophy despite boycott calls

England to play Afghanistan in Champions Trophy despite boycott calls
Updated 13 min 47 sec ago
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England to play Afghanistan in Champions Trophy despite boycott calls

England to play Afghanistan in Champions Trophy despite boycott calls
  • England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) confirmed on Thursday that the fixture would go ahead in Lahore on February 26

LONDON: England will play Afghanistan in the Champions Trophy later this month despite calls from British politicians to boycott the match over the Taliban regime’s curtailment of women’s rights.
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) confirmed on Thursday that the fixture would go ahead in Lahore on February 26 after consulting with the UK government, the International Cricket Council (ICC) and England players.
More than 160 British politicians had called for a boycott as female participation in sport has effectively been outlawed since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021.
That puts the Afghanistan cricket board at odds with ICC rules, though the men’s team are allowed to compete.
ECB chairman Richard Thompson described the situation in Afghanistan as “gender apartheid” but said the match would take place.
“We remain of the view that a coordinated international response by the cricketing community is the appropriate way forward, and will achieve more than any unilateral action by the ECB in boycotting this match,” he said.
“We have also heard that for many ordinary Afghans, watching their cricket team is one of the few remaining sources of enjoyment. As such, we can confirm that we will play this fixture.”
Afghanistan have become a greater force in white-ball cricket in recent years, rising to eighth in the one-day international world rankings, just one place below England.
Both sides will also face Australia and South Africa in Group B of the 50-over tournament, which will be hosted in Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates from February 19 until March 9.


Real Madrid great Marcelo announces retirement

Real Madrid great Marcelo announces retirement
Updated 06 February 2025
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Real Madrid great Marcelo announces retirement

Real Madrid great Marcelo announces retirement
  • The 36-year-old spent 16 years at Spanish giants Madrid, winning six La Liga titles and five Champions League trophies
  • “At 18, Real Madrid came knocking on my door and I arrived here,” Marcelo said

RIO DE JANEIRO: Former Real Madrid left-back Marcelo announced his retirement from professional football on Thursday after a trophy-laden career.
The 36-year-old spent 16 years at Spanish giants Madrid, winning six La Liga titles and five Champions League trophies.
“At 18, Real Madrid came knocking on my door and I arrived here,” Marcelo said in a video posted on social media. “Now, I can proudly say that I am a true ‘Madrileno’.
“What a journey. Real Madrid is a unique club.”
Marcelo enjoyed a strong relationship with Cristiano Ronaldo, lifting four Champions Leagues with the five-time Ballon d’Or winner.


The pair both scored in the 2014 final victory over Atletico Madrid when Real ended a 12-year wait for their 10th European Cup.
“My brother, what an incredible career! We have lived a lot together, it has been years of achievements, victories and unforgettable moments,” Ronaldo said in a post on Instagram.
“More than a teammate, a partner for life.”
Marcelo also won the Copa del Rey twice and the Club World Cup four times during his time with Los Blancos, for whom he made 546 appearances, scoring 38 goals.
“One of the greatest left-backs in Real Madrid and world football history, and we had the privilege of watching him for a long time,” said Real Madrid president Florentino Perez in a statement.
“He is one of our greatest legends and Real Madrid is and always will be his home.”
Marcelo was an unused substitute in the 2022 Champions League final when his compatriot Vinicius Junior scored the only goal against Liverpool.
“Thank you for your advice, for your reprimands, for the time spent by your side,” said Vinicius on social media.
“We were victorious on the field and we are friends off it.”
Marcelo made 58 appearances for the Brazil national team, playing at the 2014 and 2018 World Cups and winning the 2013 Confederations Cup.
He was part of the teams that won a silver medal at the 2012 Olympics and bronze in Beijing in 2008.
“Playing for my country since the youth categories has also been a great honor,” he said.
“In my memory I will always cherish two Olympic medals and a Confederations Cup.”
Marcelo started his career with Brazilian club Fluminense before leaving for Real.
When he finally left the Santiago Bernabeu he joined Greek club Olympiakos but terminated his contract after just five months to rejoin Fluminense.
Marcelo helped his home team win the Copa Libertadores for the first time with victory over Boca Juniors in the 2023 final.
He left the club by mutual consent last November and has not played since.


La Liga president slams Real Madrid for complaints about referees

La Liga president slams Real Madrid for complaints about referees
Updated 06 February 2025
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La Liga president slams Real Madrid for complaints about referees

La Liga president slams Real Madrid for complaints about referees
  • Tebas told reporters, “They have built up an exaggerated tale of victimization that is completely baseless with, in my opinion, the goal of undermining the competition”
  • The letter was sent two days after Madrid felt they were hurt by alleged refereeing mistakes in a 1-0 loss at Espanyol

BARCELONA: Spanish league president Javier Tebas lashed out at Real Madrid on Thursday, saying the club leadership has “lost its mind” for accusing Spain’s referees of being biased against the defending champion.
The head of La Liga said it was considering taking legal action for the letter that Madrid published this week in which they accused the league of being “adulterated” to favor other clubs.
Tebas told reporters, “They have built up an exaggerated tale of victimization that is completely baseless with, in my opinion, the goal of undermining the competition. It is completely over the top. They have lost their minds.”
The letter was sent two days after Madrid felt they were hurt by alleged refereeing mistakes in a 1-0 loss at Espanyol. Madrid mostly complained of a hard foul on Kylian Mbappé by Espanyol defender Carlos Romero in the 60th minute. Romero was shown a yellow card but Madrid felt he should have been sent off with a straight red card. Romero went on to score the winner.
After a video review, the officiating crew considered the yellow card was appropriate. Madrid said in their four-page letter that the performance of the VAR and the officiating crew was “scandalous.”
The club said the refereeing in the Espanyol game represented the “culmination of a completely discredited refereeing system whose decisions against Real Madrid have reached a point that the adulteration and manipulation of the competition cannot be ignored.”
Also, Madrid published a four-minute video on their club website titled “The global scandal continues to escalate” of clips of the foul by Romero on Mbappé and quotes for media outlets that considered it worth of a red card.
Tebas hit back at Real Madrid’s club television for routinely producing video packages that allegedly showed how certain referees made calls against the team. He said Real Madrid TV “calls referees corrupt.”
Madrid collected their 36th Spanish league title and their 15th European Cup – both records – last season. They lead La Liga by one point before playing second-placed Atletico Madrid on Saturday.
Rival fans — and most neutrals — have been puzzled by Madrid’s complaints about being systematically hurt by the refs.
“It’s just silly,” Atletico forward Antoine Griezmann said about the letter.
“We have to leave the referees alone. They have enough on their hands dealing with us players to on top of that have to handle this silliness from off the pitch.”