web analytics

Reuters

  • Saudi Arabia accuses Iran of making threats to neighbours

    Speaking at a joint news conference with visiting European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini, Jubeir said Saudi Arabia had raised the issue with her.

    He said the comments showed that Tehran was intervening in its neighbors’ internal affairs.

    “It does not represent the desire of a state for good neighborly relations but that of a state which has aspirations in the region and which carried out hostile act like this,” he added.

    Jubeir did not clarify who made the comments or when, but he said they could be linked to the terms of the agreement with world powers on its nuclear programme or to setbacks suffered by Iran’s Houthi allies in Yemen and President Bashar al-Assad’s forces in Syria.

    “I don’t know, but we reject their comments and reject the hostility they show towards the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the countries of the region,” he said.

    Bahrain on Saturday said it had foiled an arms smuggling plot by two Bahrainis with ties to Iran and recalled its ambassador to Tehran for consultations after what it said were repeated hostile Iranian statements.

    Relations between regional Sunni powerhouse Saudi Arabia and Shia Muslim rival Iran have long been sour, with Riyadh accusing Tehran of trying to expand its influence to its Arab neighbors and allies.

    Western-allied Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, is currently leading an Arab coalition in a campaign against the Houthis in Yemen.

    Gulf Arab states are concerned that the nuclear accord will hasten a rapprochement between Tehran and Washington that could embolden Iran to increase support for paramilitary groups across the Middle East.

    Mogherini was due to travel to Tehran on Tuesday, where she will meet Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif and other senior officials.

  • Vettel wins for Ferrari and Bianchi

    While Vettel celebrated his second win of the season, only days after the funeral of the team’s French former test driver Bianchi, Mercedes’ double world champion Hamilton finished sixth after starting from pole.

    That setback was still enough for the Briton to increase his championship lead to 21 points over team mate Nico Rosberg, who collided with Australian Daniel Ricciardo while fighting to defend second place and ended up eighth.

    Russian Daniil Kvyat took second instead for Red Bull — his first F1 podium appearance — with team mate Ricciardo following home in third after banging into both Mercedes on a battling afternoon.

    Dutch 17-year-old Max Verstappen was fourth for Toro Rosso.

    Vettel dedicated his win to Bianchi, the Marussia driver who died in hospital nine months after suffering severe head injuries at the Japanese Grand Prix, once he had taken the chequered flag.

    Speaking in French for the watching family, he added in English: “We know sooner or later Jules would have been a part of this team.”

    The win was Vettel’s 41st, putting him level with the late triple champion Ayrton Senna on the all-time lists, and first in Hungary.

    The result ended a record run for Mercedes and their two drivers, who had won eight of the previous nine races and started all on pole.

    Hamilton’s run of 16 podiums in a row, and 18 successive races with at least one lap led, came to an abrupt and unexpected end.

    The double world champion went from runaway favourite to scrapping for a point after being handed a drive-through penalty for causing a collision with Ricciardo.

    “Today was weird. Do I deserve any points? I didn’t give up and drove as hard as I could,” said Hamilton. “To come away from one of the worst performances I’ve put in in a long, long time… it shows we are human.

    “I was all over the place. I don’t have any words to explain what happened today. It was a really bad performance from myself.

    “I pushed and never gave up but when I had two different choices I chose the wrong one every time.”

    Rosberg, who had looked poised to win and take the championship lead at one point, could only rue what might have been as Mercedes’s hopes of getting both drivers on the podium for a record 10th race in a row evaporated.

    However, even eighth was a bonus after the German struggled to guide his stricken car back to the pits with a flailing tyre after his collision.

    The race took an unexpected and sensational twist right from the off as Vettel made a stunning start to seize the lead.

    With Ferrari team mate Kimi Raikkonen following through to slot into second place, Hamilton and Rosberg were caught napping.

    What might have been Ferrari’s first one-two finish since Germany in 2010 unravelled after 40 of the 69 laps when Raikkonen reported a loss of power and then retired.

    Vettel looked comfortable until the safety car again ripped up the script, deployed after Nico Hulkenberg’s Force India shed a front wing and left an explosion of debris across the track before slamming into the tyre barrier.

    That left the leaders tightly bunched again but Hamilton, by then up to fourth, collided with Ricciardo after the re-start and dropped down to 13th. After the drive-through penalty, he was 15th.

    On a day of surprises, McLaren’s miserable season suddenly looked brighter with Fernando Alonso fifth and Jenson Button ninth — their first double points finish of the year and new Honda partnership.

    France’s Romain Grosjean was seventh for Lotus while Sweden’s Marcus Ericsson took the final point in 10th for Sauber.

  • Mexico beat Jamaica for CONCACAF Gold Cup

    Jamaica had become the first Caribbean team to reach the final, but El Tri stole the storyline at Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field by winning their third Cup championship from the last four played.

    Despite a fast and inspired start by the Jamaicans, Mexico quickly turned the tide and got goals from Andres Guardado, Jesus Corona and Oribe Peralta in the victory.

    Mexico will now play the United States on Oct. 9 in a playoff for the region’s berth in the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup.

    Against Jamaica, Mexico weathered an early attack and took control in the 31st minute where Guardado took a cross and finished with a beautiful left-footed volley into the upper right corner.

    It was his sixth goal of the tournament, one less than Clint Dempsey of the United States, who took the tournament’s Golden Boot Award.

    Guardado won the tournament’s Golden Ball Award as the top player.

    Jamaica defensive miscues by Michael Hector led to the next two goals from Mexico.

    In the 47th minute, Corona took the ball from Hector and finished it himself. In the 61st minute, Hector missed a chance to clear from in front of the goal and that led to Peralta’s score.

    Darren Mattocks scored Jamaica’s only goal in the 80th minute, scoring for his second successive game.

    Despite the defeat, Jamaica remained proud of their accomplishment.

    “It’s tough but I couldn’t be more proud of my team right now,” said Jamaica’s Giles Barnes. “We have a lot to look forward to in the future.”

    Mexico reached the final on some controversial penalty calls in their semi-final victory over Panama, but they proved their worth decisively in the final.

  • South Africa announce landmark India tour

    The Proteas will also play five One-Day Internationals and three Twenty20 matches between Oct. 2 and Dec. 7 in what has been described as a landmark tour by Cricket South Africa (CSA).

    “This will be the longest tour that we have undertaken to India and the first time we will play a four-Test series,” CSA CEO Haroon Lorgat said in a statement.

    “Both countries are now working to develop this into an icon series. Another first is that we will be playing our first Twenty20 International match against India in India.”

    If fit, leading South African batsman AB de Villiers will play his 100th test in Bangalore, a city he represents in the Indian Premier League Twenty20 competition.

    South Africa have drawn their previous two test series in India, the last in 2010, but did claim a 2-0 series win in 2000, their only success in five visits since readmission to international cricket in 1992.

    Twenty20 Internationals: 

    Oct. 2: 1st T20, Dharamshala

    Oct. 5: 2nd T20, Cuttack

    Oct. 8: 3rd T20, Kolkata

    One Day Internationals:

    Oct. 11: 1st ODI, Kanpur

    Oct. 14: 2nd ODI, Indore

    Oct. 18: 3rd ODI, Rajkot

    Oct. 22: 4th ODI, Chennai

    Oct. 25: 5th ODI, Mumbai

    Tests:

    Nov. 5-9: 1st Test, Mohali

    Nov. 14-18: 2nd Test, Bangalore

    Nov. 25-29: 3rd Test, Nagpur

    Dec. 3-7: 4th Test, Delhi

  • Manchester United sign Argentine keeper Romero

    The 28-year-old, who played under United manager Louis van Gaal when they were both at Dutch side AZ Alkmaar, left Sampdoria in the summer at the end of his contract.

    “To play for the biggest club in the world is a dream come true for me,” he told United’s website.

    “Louis van Gaal is a fantastic manager and I cannot wait to get started on this new and exciting challenge in my career.”

    Romero has joined United on their pre-season tour of the United States, where they beat Barcelona 3-1 on Saturday.

    “Sergio is a very talented goalkeeper. He was a young keeper during my time at AZ Alkmaar and I am delighted he is joining Manchester United,” said Van Gaal.

    Romero and his new manager also crossed paths last summer at the World Cup where Argentina eliminated the Van Gaal-coached Netherlands in a semi-final penalty shootout.

    “He had a fantastic World Cup last summer in Brazil, although that is something I have put to the back of my mind! He will be a great addition to the team and I am looking forward to working with him once again,” added Van Gaal.

    Romero’s arrival is expected to herald the departure of United’s backup Victor Valdes, who was left out of the tour party and told to leave the club due to a row with the manager.

    Van Gaal said Valdes had refused to play for United’s reserve team, a claim disputed by the Spaniard.

    Speculation also continues over the future of first-choice United keeper David De Gea, who has been linked with a move to Real Madrid, with the La Liga team’s defender Sergio Ramos coming to the English side as part of a swap deal.

  • 'Ant-Man' tops charts, 'Pixels' opens to lackluster $24 million

    The critically derided comedy finished up just behind Disney and Marvel’s “Ant-Man,” which picked up first place and $24.8 million in its second weekend. That marks the weakest chart-topping performance since April 24 when “Furious 7,” then in its fourth week of release, bested all challengers with $17.8 million. So far, “Ant-Man” has earned $106.1 million stateside.

    The weekend box office race unfolded in the shadow of a shocking act of violence after a gunman opened fire during a Thursday night screening of “Trainwreck” in Louisiana, killing two women and injuring nine people before turning the weapon on himself. Safety concerns across the country may have caused some consumers to steer clear of cinemas.

    Among the weekend’s other new releases, Fox’s “Paper Towns” picked up $12.5 million from 3,031 locations, while The Weinstein Company’s “Southpaw” snagged $16.5 million from 2,772 theaters. “Paper Towns” missed analysts’ projections. Most estimates had the latest tween romance from “Fault in Our Stars” author John Green debuting to north of $20 million. With a production budget of $12 million, it still stands to be profitable, but the results seemed to puzzle the studio, which thought it had a hit on its hands.

    “I’m really somewhat mystified,” said Chris Aronson, domestic distribution chief at Fox. “It’s something we’re going to have to look at and review on a post-mortem basis and find out why we didn’t get more people in.”

    “Southpaw,” an uplifting boxing drama with Jake Gyllenhaal, did better than expected, potentially setting the $25 million drama up for a healthy run with those moviegoers who have grown weary of dinosaurs and costumed heroes. The picture attracted a diverse crowd that was 24% Latino, 21% African-American, and 60% under the age of 35. The film’s star was front and center, doing interviews on everything from Fresh Air to Sports Center, while recounting the physical transformation he underwent to believably play a fighter.

    “Jake was everywhere and people responded to him,” said Erik Lomis, the Weinstein Company’s distribution chief.

    He predicted a long run, noting, “It appeals to the people on a mass level and it’s a very satisfying film.”

    In the case of “Pixels,” the Sony release cost $88 million to produce, a figure that is moderate by summer blockbuster standards, and the studio touted its overseas performance. The picture has made more than $25 million to date, Sony said. In the U.S., the opening weekend crowd was 62% under the age of 25 and 55% male.

    It ranks as another disappointment for Sandler. Four years ago, he was perhaps the most consistent comedian in terms of box office performance, fielding hits like “I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry,” “Grown Ups,” and “Just Go With It.” More recently, he has struggled mightily – headlining flops and duds like “Blended” and “That’s My Boy.” Only a sequel to “Grown Ups” and “Hotel Transylvania,” an animated film that only featured his voice, have worked. He will now look to salvation in the form of a multi-picture deal with Netflix.

    Holdovers, “Minions” and “Trainwreck,” picked up $22.1 million and $17.3 million, pushing their totals to $261.6 million and $61.5 million, respectively. In milestone news, “Jurassic World” has now blown past “Marvel’s The Avengers” on the domestic all-time list, becoming the third biggest film in history, when not adjusted for inflation, with $623.8 million. It earned $6.9 million.

  • Police find 1,200 guns at dead man's Los Angeles house

    Officers made the discovery after the man’s body was found in a car in West Los Angeles on Friday, the Los Angeles Police Department said in a statement.

    Los Angeles County assistant chief coroner Ed Winter said the man, whose name has not been released, was already decomposing when found. An autopsy was planned for Tuesday or Wednesday.

    The 1,200 firearms found at the man’s home included handguns, rifles and shotguns, police said. The weapons and 2 tons of ammunition were taken to the police department’s property division.

    While there is no absolute limit to the number of guns a person can legally own in California, LAPD spokeswoman Officer Liliana Preciado said investigators will check who was the registered owner of the weapons and if any of the firearms have been linked to any crimes.

    Detectives with a warrant entered the man’s home after the discovery of his body because they were looking for evidence that would explain his death, police said.

    LAPD Commander Andrew Smith told the Los Angeles Times there were no immediate signs of foul play and that detectives were not investigating the death as a homicide.

    The number of firearms at the house far exceeded the haul from a recent Los Angeles gun-buyback collection. On May 9, authorities rounded up 746 guns in exchange for supermarket gift cards they gave individuals who turned in the weapons, part a program intended to make the city’s streets safer.

  • South Africa's de Kock fined for barging into Tamim

    De Kock and Tamim were involved in a shoulder-barging incident at the stroke of lunch on Wednesday after an altercation and the 22-year-old South African later pleaded guilty to the charge.

    “As the over before lunch came to an end, Quinton de Kock walked in front of the stumps to confront Tamim Iqbal,” match referee Chris Broad said in a statement.

    “In doing so de Kock deliberately brushed Tamim Iqbal’s shoulder and rib area. This resulted in a heated exchange between the two, initiated by the contact made by de Kock.

    “This type of incident has no place on a cricket field.”

  • Coffee drinking may lower inflammation, reduce diabetes risk

    “Extensive research has revealed that coffee drinking exhibits both beneficial and aggravating health effects,” said Demosthenes B. Panagiotakos of the department of Nutrition and Dietetics at Harokopio University in Athens, Greece.

    “An inverse relation between coffee intake and diabetes has been reported in many prospective studies whereas some have yielded insignificant results,” Panagiotakos, a co-author of the new study, told Reuters Health by email.

    Since he and his colleagues merely observed the study participants, and didn’t assign them randomly to drink or abstain from coffee, they still can’t be sure that drinking coffee helps prevent diabetes, but their findings might help form the basis of a cause-and-effect hypothesis, Panagiotakos said.

    In 2001 and 2002, the researchers selected a random sample of more than 1,300 men and women age 18 years and older in Athens. The participants filled out dietary questionnaires including questions about coffee drinking frequency.

    Drinking less than 1.5 cups of coffee per day was termed “casual” coffee drinking, and more than 1.5 cups per day was “habitual” drinking. There were 816 casual drinkers, 385 habitual drinkers and 239 non-coffee drinkers.

    The participants also had blood tests to evaluate levels of protein markers of inflammation. The tests also measured antioxidant levels, which indicate the body’s ability to neutralize cell-damaging “free radicals.”

    Ten years later, 191 people had developed diabetes, including 13 percent of the men and 12 percent of the women in the original group. And participants who reported higher coffee consumption had lower likelihoods of developing diabetes.

    Habitual coffee drinkers were 54 percent less likely to develop diabetes compared to non-coffee drinkers, even after accounting for smoking, high blood pressure, family history of diabetes and intake of other caffeinated beverages, the researchers reported in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

    Levels of serum amyloid, one of the inflammatory markers in the blood, seemed to explain some of the relationship between coffee and diabetes, the authors write. Higher coffee consumption went along with lower amyloid levels.

    “Previous studies pointed in the same direction . . . now we have an additional hint,” said Dr. Marc Y. Donath, chief of Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism at University Hospital Basel in Switzerland, who was not part of the new study.

    The new findings are supported by a prospective study in 2013 involving 836 people who didn’t have diabetes at the start of the study, Panagiotakos said. Over the next seven years, high levels of amyloid and another inflammatory marker called C-reactive protein “were found to precede the onset of diabetes, independently of other risk factors,” he said.

    It’s possible that other influences were also at work, he acknowledged.

    “Oxidative stress has been shown to accelerate the dysfunction of pancreatic b-cells and antioxidants intake has been shown to decrease diabetes risk, so the antioxidant components of coffee may be beneficial, but still more research is needed toward this direction,” Panagiotakos said.

    Some studies have found that the association between coffee and diabetes risk is stronger for women and non-smokers, according to Dongfeng Zhang of the department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics at Qingdao University Medical College in China, who also was not part of the new study.

    We are not yet sure that coffee helps prevent diabetes, but “what is sure and remains more effective is exercise and body weight control,” Donath told Reuters Health by email.

  • Women football stars to make debut on FIFA video game cover

    Morgan, 26, helped bring the U.S. football team victory against Japan in the 2015 Women’s World Cup final earlier this month.

    The forward will be pictured on the U.S. version of FIFA 16 alongside Barcelona’s Lionel Messi, EA Sports said. A Canadian version of the game will feature Messi and Canada’s captain, Christine Sinclair.

    EA Sports unveiled plans in May in the lead-up to the Women’s World Cup to include women in the FIFA videogame franchise for the first time. Only men’s teams had featured in the game since it was first released in 1993.

    Morgan said it was an honour to be one of the faces of the 12 international women’s teams which will play in FIFA 16 and include England, Germany, the United States and Brazil.

    “I know people all over the world play this game and I’m really excited that FIFA 16 is putting such an important spotlight on women’s soccer,” Morgan said in a statement.

    FIFA is the world’s most popular football video game and the latest instalment, FIFA 15, sold more than 16 million copies, according to video game research firm VG Chartz.

    The Women’s World Cup, played in six cities across Canada, put the spotlight on the women’s sport, which is gaining in popularity but still lags far behind men’s football.

    For example, FIFA invests about $900 million a year in football projects around the world but only 15 percent of that goes to women’s football, Mayrilian Cruz-Blanco, FIFA’s senior women’s football developing manager, told a recent news conference.

    Morgan was in the USA women’s team which won an Olympic gold medal at the 2012 London Games after beating Japan 2-1. Sinclair won her first Olympic medal that year, receiving bronze as a member of Canada’s Women’s football team.