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Sudanese paramilitary drone strikes kill at least 15 people in central region, officials say


CAIRO — Sudanese paramilitary forces carried out drone strikes overnight in central Sudan, killing at least 15 people and wounding dozens, health officials said Thursday, as the use of unmanned aircraft becomes increasingly common in the more than three-year war in the African country.

The attacks, which started late Wednesday, targeted various areas of the city of el-Obeid, including near an army position, according to two health officials at el-Obed Hospital, which received the victims. More than 10 people were also wounded, some critically, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The war in Sudan erupted in April 2023, after long-simmering tensions between the army and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, or RSF. The conflict has killed at least 59,000 people, displaced some 13 million, and pushed many parts of the country into famine. More than 30 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance.

Dr. Mohamed Elsheikh, a spokesperson with Sudan Doctors Network, which tracks casualty tolls, told The Associated Press that in el-Obeid, RSF drones also hit a funeral gathering at a cemetery, killing four people there, and a gas station. He could not immediately confirm if the casualties were civilians, combatants or both.

An aid worker with Mercy Corps told the AP that drone attacks have intensified across el-Obeid in recent days, targeting gatherings of people in the city. The worker, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals, said schools have suspended classes and markets are only partially open because of the attacks.

Emergency Lawyers, a local aid monitoring group, said Thursday the toll is likely to increase as drones were still flying over the city.

The group said homes near military headquarters of the 5th Infantry Division in el-Obeid were hit, as well as a truck carrying food supplies into the city. Its driver was killed, the group said.

“This series of attacks indicates a widespread pattern of targeting civilian gatherings, neighborhoods and infrastructure, including during rescue operations and funerals,” the group also said, expressing concerns about the indiscriminatory nature of the attacks.

The war, now in its fourth year, has left the Sudanese military in control of the north, east and central regions, including Sudan’s Red Sea ports and its oil refineries and pipelines. The RSF and its allies control Darfur and parts of Kordofan along the border with South Sudan — both regions rich in oil fields and gold mines.

Drone warfare has become the deadliest threat to civilians in Sudan ’s conflict and both the military and the RSF are being supplied by a number of countries in the Middle East and beyond, experts have said. A surge in drone attacks in Kordofan has also hampered aid operations there, humanitarian workers say.

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Abdalla reported from Shendi, Sudan.



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A car hits a school group in the Netherlands, killing 2 kids and a chaperone


THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Two children and an adult were killed Thursday in the rural southern Netherlands when a car struck a group of cyclists who were on a school camping trip, local emergency services said.

Four more children were seriously injured in the incident. They were taken to hospitals in the Netherlands and nearby Belgium for treatment. The dead and injured were part of a group of 14 schoolchildren and two chaperones, the Zeeland Security Region organization said in a statement.

Police are investigating the cause of the incident on a provincial road that runs between farmers’ fields near the small town of Vogelwaarde, some 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Amsterdam.

There was no immediate word from authorities on the driver of the car. A photo displayed on Dutch media showed a car, with its windshield smashed and hood damaged, in a field next to the road.

Such incidents involving multiple cyclists are rare in the Netherlands, where bicycle riding is woven into everyday life and almost all roads have dedicated cycle lanes.

No further details were immediately available.



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Police officer in Toronto killed in shooting linked to investigation of a US Consulate attack


TORONTO — A Toronto police officer was shot and killed Thursday by a suspect linked to the investigation of an attack that damaged the facade of the U.S. Consulate in the Canadian city in March, police said.

One suspect was in custody at a hospital while officers searched for a second suspect, Toronto Police Chief Myron Demkiw said at a news conference.

Canadian police had said in March that two individuals emerged from a white Honda RV SUV at around 4:30 a.m. and fired multiple shots at the consulate building before fleeing. The shooting damaged the outside of the building but did not cause any injuries.

The consulate attack in March followed heightened tensions over the war launched by the U.S. and Israel against Iran in late February, and it had followed gunfire attacks on two Toronto-area synagogues the previous weekend.



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India’s viral Cockroach Party launches nationwide youth protests


NEW DELHI — India’s viral Cockroach Janta Party launched a nationwide protest campaign on Thursday with hundreds of students and young supporters gathering in the western city of Pune in the youth movement’s latest show of strength.

The rally at Savitribai Phule Pune University followed the group’s first major street protest in New Delhi last week. It demanded the resignation of Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan over alleged examination irregularities and repeated paper leaks.

CJP founder Abhijeet Dipke, a political communications strategist and Boston University student, addressed supporters and said Thursday marked the start of a broader national campaign. He announced plans for protests in other cities and said supporters would return to New Delhi later this month if the education minister did not step down.

“The government cannot ignore the youth,” Dipke, who recently returned from the United States to lead the campaign, told reporters.

The movement emerged in May, after Supreme Court judge Surya Kant’s remarks comparing some unemployed youth to “cockroaches” triggered outrage. Supporters embraced the term as a symbol of resilience, helping the group amass more than 22 million followers on Instagram.

The movement’s message has since expanded to include concerns over unemployment, rising living costs and government accountability.

The CJP mixes self-deprecating humor with political criticism. Supporters jokingly call themselves unemployed and chronically online, while videos and memes mocking unemployment, corruption and political dysfunction have attracted millions of views. Many parody CJP accounts have also adopted the cockroach as a satirical political symbol.



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London Stadium and West Ham women's team not aware of David Sullivan contact ban



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'Mum was killing me': England's Declan Rice on sunburn for his World Cup photoshoot



The Arsenal midfielder admits he was a touch pink in pre-tournament photos as players try to adjust to scorching conditions.



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Shaun Edwards: Defence coach in discussion over France exit


Shaun Edwards’ departure from France’s national team is being negotiated, with the fabled defence coach set to be without a role a year out from the Rugby World Cup.

The 59-year-old’s exit is complicated by the 18 months remaining on his contract and France’s desire to protect confidentiality around tactics.

France have won the Six Nations three times during Edwards’ stint, but they conceded more tries than any other team apart from bottom side Wales en route to the 2026 title.

Edwards has been absent from France’s training camps since the tournament, while relations between the Wigan and Great Britain rugby league legend and head coach Fabien Galthie have been strained in the past.

Edwards, who spent a successful 12 years with Wales and won four English titles and two Champions Cups while on Wasps’ staff, said in March that he was interested in coaching in the Rugby Championship, the southern hemisphere tournament contested by South Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Argentina.

With a little more than a year to go before Australia 2027, that possibility will have raised concerns in the FFR (French Rugby Federation).

Following France’s quarter-final exit on home soil at the last Rugby World Cup, it emerged that South Africa’s coaches had decoded one of their tactical calls, external before a 29-28 win.

Unions can be fiercely protective of the ‘intellectual property’ around their flagship teams.

England initially held defence coach Felix Jones, who had picked up on the French forwards’ pick-and-go call via YouTube footage while working on the ‘Boks’ World Cup campaign, to a 12-month notice period after he resigned in August 2024.

Non-compete clauses, preventing coaches taking on a job with a rival team for a set amount of time, are also common.



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