Gunned! How Arsenal uses ball pace and Saka as routine missiles to blow Tottenham Hotspurs cold

Gunned! How Arsenal uses ball pace and Saka as routine missiles to blow Tottenham Hotspurs cold

When the opponents are Tottenham Hotspur, Arsenal have a clear plan. They figured out how to hurt their neighbours and biggest rivals a while back, and Bukayo Saka tends to be their weapon of choice. The 22-year-old scored his 15th league goal of the season, his best tally for a single campaign, to make it 2-0 on Sunday but that was not the only significant aspect of his finish. It was the latest in a string of very similar moves he has been involved in to hurt Spurs over the past three seasons, dating back to September 2021.

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Proposed international mission to Haiti in limbo even after installation transitional government

Proposed international mission to Haiti in limbo even after installation transitional government

Haiti, long the poorest country in the Western hemisphere with a legacy of slavery, foreign occupation and dictatorships, has experienced an escalation in gang violence since 2021, when its last president, Jovenel Moise, was assassinated.

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FTC report lays bare how corporate greed puts huge bite on working families who spend most of their income on food

FTC report lays bare how corporate greed puts huge bite on working families who spend most of their income on food

Time and again, big companies tell us that if they could only get bigger, they would pass savings on to consumers. This is almost never true. Instead, they give money back to their investors and reward executives – like Walmart’s Doug McMillon, who takes home over $25 million a year, and Kroger’s Rodney McMullen, who makes more than $19 million. That’s 671 times more than the amount an average Kroger worker makes.

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World War III is on, but it’s not some conquering army sweeping its way across the continent

World War III is on, but it’s not some conquering army sweeping its way across the continent

South of Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Armenia continue to simmer. Last year, Azerbaijan attacked the breakaway republic of Artsakh. With the backing of Turkey and Israeli weapons, Azerbaijan attempted to permanently squash the ethnic Armenian enclave, successfully driving tens of thousands of civilians into neighbouring countries.

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Shift in character and tenor of modern conflicts gives Israel attack on Iran tone of World War III

Shift in character and tenor of modern conflicts gives Israel attack on Iran tone of World War III

As the media and the world awaits full-scale war between Iran and Israel and even frets about nuclear escalation, a huge reality of modern warfare is being overlooked: We are already fighting World War III. No, it is not empires marching armies through countries, conquering continents. And no, it isn’t millions of young men (and now women) pressed in uniform on scales of nearly 100 years ago. And no, in most societies where war is a constant, the public doesn’t even have to feel the pain of war, except in that the military dominates everything and robs everything else of resources: programmes to fight poverty, food, housing, health care, transportation, climate change.

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Questions raised about African navies conspicuous absence in fight against piracy

Questions raised about African navies conspicuous absence in fight against piracy

Western navies and the Indian Navy have stepped in to contain the emerging threat landscape through multinational naval responses – including Prosperity Guardian, Operation Aspides (EUNAVFOR) and Operation ATALANTA (anti-piracy). These efforts are vested in maintaining the integrity of the maritime component underpinning the global economy.

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Africa’s threadbare maritime security in Red Sea and Western Indian Ocean exposes weak links

Africa’s threadbare maritime security in Red Sea and Western Indian Ocean exposes weak links

The Houthis have also demonstrated a robust capacity for ballistic missile, drone, and subsea technological disruption. These deployments flag the proliferation of modern materiel to nonstate armed groups. The increased maritime militarisation of nonstate actors and criminal groups poses a direct threat to African assets, infrastructure and national interests elsewhere on the continent.

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Why Tutsis are at the centre of DR Congo’s conflict 30 years after Rwanda genocide

Why Tutsis are at the centre of DR Congo’s conflict 30 years after Rwanda genocide

The M23 and the FDLR are fewer in numbers than other armed groups in the east. However, their outsized representation in public discourse and regional negotiations shows the long-term impact of the Rwandan genocide in the region.

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Once a juggernaut in India’s politics under Nehru and Gandhis, Congress party now trails Modi’s BJP

Once a juggernaut in India’s politics under Nehru and Gandhis, Congress party now trails Modi’s BJP

The BJP’s critics, who say that Modi’s government discriminates against religious minorities such as Muslims and has weaponised law enforcement agencies against political opponents, fear a third term would be corrosive to democracy in the world’s most populous nation.

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Why ‘Conscious Ugandans’ are wary of presidents Museveni and Kagame entrenching Tutsi feudalism in East Africa

Why ‘Conscious Ugandans’ are wary of presidents Museveni and Kagame entrenching Tutsi feudalism in East Africa

Paradoxically in the initial period of colonisation, the Catholic church played midwife to Tutsi privileges. However, during the 1950s the church became solid supporter of the Hutus. The volte face of the church began in the late 1930s with the change in the character of the Belgian priests then coming into Rwanda. They were mainly from the region of Belgium called Wallonia.

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