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Ex-Arsenal Star Thomas Partey Charged With Rape

Former Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey has been charged with five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault. The offences are reported to have taken place between 2021-2022, the Metropolitan Police said. The charges involve three women, with two counts of rape relating to one woman, three counts of rape in connection to a second woman and one count of sexual assault linked to a third woman. The Ghanaian international denies the charges and “welcomes the opportunity to finally clear his name”, his lawyer said. The charges follow an investigation by detectives, which started in February 2022 after police first received a report of rape. The 32-year-old’s contract with Arsenal ended on Monday after playing with the team since 2020. Det Supt Andy Furphy, who is leading the investigation, said: “Our priority remains providing support to the women who have come forward. “We would ask anyone who has been impacted by this case, or anyone who has information, to speak with our team. You can contact detectives about this investigation by emailing CIT@met.police.uk” Mr Partey, of Hertfordshire, is expected to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday 5 August. In a statement, his lawyer Jenny Wiltshire said: “Thomas Partey denies all the charges against him. “He has fully cooperated with the police and CPS throughout their three-year investigation. “He now welcomes the opportunity to finally clear his name. “Given that there are now ongoing legal proceedings, my client is unable to comment further.” Mr Partey joined Arsenal for £45.3m from Atletico Madrid in October 2020, made 35 top-flight appearances last season and scored four goals as the London club finished second in the Premier League. He also played 12 times in the Champions League as the Gunners reached the semi-finals before being knocked out by eventual winners Paris St-Germain. Overall, he made 130 Premier League appearances for Mikel Arteta’s side, scoring nine goals. Mr Partey has also made more than 50 appearances for Ghana’s national team, and most recently played at World Cup qualification matches in March.

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SWAN Wants FG To Immortalise Ex-Super Eagles’ Goalkeeper Peter Rufai

The Sports Writers Association of Nigeria (SWAN) has expressed grief over the demise of Super Eagles legendary goalkeeper Peter ‘Dodo Mayana’ Rufai. SWAN President, Mr. Isaiah Benjamin, in a statement on Friday in Abuja, through the Association’s Secretary-General, Amb. Ikenna Okonkwo, described Rufai as a patriot who made Nigeria proud as his legacies linger. The number one Sports Writer in Nigeria while remembering the footprints of hardwork, dedication and abundant results credited to Rufai over the years, called on the Federal Government to make plans to immortalise the late Sage in any memorable way possible. “It’s our desire and I believe that of entire Nigerians that immortalising Peter Rufai will among other things serve as a source of inspiration for younger generation,” he said. President Benjamin then commiserated with his immediate family members, football and entire sports fraternity for the loss of a rare soccer figure. He said, “On behalf of the entire Sporting Media in Nigeria, I wish to commiserate with the family, and indeed concerned Football and Sports Stakeholders over the death of our legend. “Yes, Peter Rufai served Nigeria meritorious, mostly during his playing days, but I fill his advice and experience were still needed for a more prosperous sports development, but the reason for his departure from this side of life at this time is only known or determined by God Almighty. “May his soul continuously find rest in eternity.” Rufai’s life time, especially in his active playing days as a footballer is one filled with numerous success stories. From the clubs he featured for, to the Senior Men National team, he made an indelible impacts which will hardly be forgotten.

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8th African Nations Championship: Chelle Names Nduka, Daniel, Yusuf, 32 Others

Head Coach Eric Chelle has named 35 players, among them captain Junior Harrison Nduka, Papa Mustapha Daniel and forward Anas Yusuf in the provisional list of Super Eagles B for the 8th African Nations Championship taking place in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda next month. First-choice goalkeeper Henry Ani is also called, alongside defenders Waliu Ojetoye, Ifeanyi Onyebuchi, Mohammed Kabiru and Uzondu Harrison, midfielders Saviour Isaac and Haddi Haruna, and forwards Sunday Megwo, Adamu Abubakar and Godwin Obaje. Goalkeepers Kayode Bankole and Ebenezer Harcourt, defenders Sodiq Ismaila and Stephen Manyo Egbe, midfielder Adam Aminu, and forwards Atule Joseph and Temitope Vincent have also been invited. Nigeria, 2018 runners-up, are housed in group D of the 19-team tournament, alongside Cup holders Senegal, Sudan and Congo. The Super Eagles will play their first two matches of the competition, against Senegal and Sudan, at the Amman Stadium on the island of Zanzibar, before taking on Congo at the Benjamin Mkapa Stadium in Dar es Salaam. All invited players have been instructed to turn up at the Remo Stars Sports Institute, Ikenne-Remo, Ogun State on Monday, 7th July with their international passports and current club license. 35 PLAYERS FOR SUPER EAGLES B CAMPING IN IKENNE-REMO Goalkeepers: Henry Ozoemena Ani (Enyimba FC); Kayode Bankole (Remo Stars); Nurudeen Badmus (Kwara United); Lawal Mustapha (Shooting Stars); Ebenezer Harcourt (Sporting Lagos) Defenders: Sodiq Ismaila (Remo Stars); Waliu Ojewole (Ikorodu City);C Bankole Afeez (Kwara United); Taiwo Abdulrafiu (Rivers United); Uzondu Harrison (Ikorodu City); Junior Harrison Nduka (Remo Stars); Mohammed Kabiru (Kwara United); Ngengen Leonard (Ikorodu City); Ifeanyi Onyebuchi (Rangers International); Steven Mayo Egbe (Rivers United) Midfielders: Adebayo Olamilekan (Remo Stars); Adejoh Ojonugwa (Abia Warriors); Saviour Isaac (Rangers International); Musa Zayyad (El-Kanemi Warriors); Haddi Haruna (Remo Stars); Otaniyi Taofik (Rivers United); Papa Daniel Mustapha (Niger Tornadoes); Adam Aminu (Kano Pillars); Michael Tochukwu (Remo Stars) Forwards: Anas Yusuf (Nasarawa United); Adamu Abubakar (Plateau United); Shola Adelani (Ikorodu City); Sikiru Alimi (Remo Stars); Temitope Vincent (Plateau United); Ijoma Anthony (Abia Warriors); Atule Joseph (Enyimba FC); Ayomide Cole (Ikorodu City); Sunday Megwo (Abia Warriors); Aniekeme Okon (Rivers United); Godwin Obaje (Rangers International)

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Birmingham City Signs Osayi-Samuel from Fenerbahce

Birmingham City have signed Nigeria international full-back Bright Osayi-Samuel on a three-year deal following the conclusion of his contract at Fenerbahce. The 27-year-old moves to St Andrew’s after making 178 appearances in four and a half years for the side now coached by Jose Mourinho following his move from Queens Park Rangers in January 2021. Osayi-Samuel, who can play as a right-back, wing-back and as a winger, becomes Blues’ fourth signing this week following the arrivals of Demarai Gray, Tommy Doyle and James Beadle as they prepare for life back in the second tier after securing the League One title last season. He has made 22 appearances for Nigeria since his debut in 2022, and was part of the squad which finished runners-up at the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations. Having made his professional debut for Blackpool at the age of 17, Osayi-Samuel was part of the squad which won promotion from League Two via the play-offs in 2017. Osayi-Samuel went on to make 103 Championship appearances for QPR after moving to Loftus Road in the summer of 2017, adding to the six appearances he made in the second tier for Blackpool during the 2014-15 season. “I want to play in the Premier League and show everyone what I can do,” Osayi-Samuel told Birmingham’s website., external “Coming to Birmingham City now is another step for me, an opportunity to show everyone where I’ve been for the last four years.”

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IAEA Inspectors Leave Iran Following US-Israel-Iran Conflict Marking Start of Nuclear Ambiguity

Tehran, Iran – July 5, 2025 — A team of inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has departed Iran, following Tehran’s decision to suspend cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog in the wake of the 12-day military conflict involving Israel, the United States, and Iran. In a statement on Friday, the IAEA confirmed that some of its staff had returned to its headquarters in Vienna, Austria, with Director-General Rafael Grossi urging the swift resumption of monitoring and verification operations inside Iran. While the IAEA did not disclose how many inspectors left or whether any remain in the country, Al Jazeera’s Resul Serdar, reporting from Tehran, said that the officials departed via land through Armenia, signaling the beginning of what observers are calling a new era of “nuclear ambiguity” in Iran. Iran Cuts Ties With IAEA After Airstrikes The inspectors had remained in Iran throughout the fighting, which began on June 13 when Israel launched airstrikes on Iranian military facilities, killing senior military officials, scientists, and civilians. The United States later joined the assault, dropping bunker-buster bombs on suspected nuclear sites — a move the Trump administration claimed set back Iran’s nuclear programme significantly. Following these events, Iran formally suspended cooperation with the IAEA, citing a deep erosion of trust and accusing the agency of bias. On Wednesday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian ordered an end to ties with the IAEA, a decision backed by the Iranian Parliament and the Guardian Council. Guardian Council spokesperson Hadi Tahan Nazif defended the move as protecting Iran’s national sovereignty, adding that cooperation would only resume when there is “guaranteed security for nuclear facilities and scientists.” Diplomatic Fallout and Global Reaction The decision comes shortly after the IAEA passed a resolution on June 12 — just one day before the conflict began — accusing Iran of failing to meet its nuclear obligations under the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Iran criticized the timing of the resolution and condemned the IAEA for its silence on the subsequent US and Israeli airstrikes. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi dismissed Grossi’s request to inspect bombed nuclear sites, saying the demand was “meaningless and possibly malign in intent.” Meanwhile, Washington reacted sharply. US State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce described Iran’s move as “unacceptable” and urged Tehran to “reverse course and choose a path of peace and prosperity.” She reiterated the Biden administration’s stance: “Iran cannot and will not have a nuclear weapon.” Iran has consistently denied any intention to build nuclear arms, insisting that its programme is strictly for civilian energy purposes. To date, neither US intelligence nor the IAEA has provided definitive proof that Tehran is developing nuclear weapons. What Happens Next? The withdrawal of IAEA inspectors raises critical concerns over nuclear transparency in the region. Experts warn that the lack of independent verification could escalate tensions further and undermine any remaining diplomatic channels. While Iran maintains that its nuclear work remains peaceful, its rejection of inspections and the secrecy now surrounding its facilities may fuel international suspicion and increase the risk of miscalculation in an already volatile Middle East. As of now, there is no indication of when — or if — Iran will restore its cooperation with the IAEA.

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UN: Over 600 Palestinians Killed at Gaza Aid Sites and Near Humanitarian Convoys

Geneva, Switzerland – The United Nations has confirmed that at least 613 Palestinians have been killed at or near humanitarian aid distribution points and convoys in Gaza as of June 27, raising alarms about the dangers civilians face while trying to access lifesaving assistance. According to Ravina Shamdasani, spokesperson for the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the majority of the deaths—509 individuals—occurred near sites operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a controversial aid initiative backed by Israel and the United States. “These sites are becoming death zones,” Shamdasani warned during a press briefing in Geneva on Friday. “This figure is not final. Since June 27, there have been further incidents.” The Gaza Health Ministry has reported even higher casualties, estimating over 650 killed and more than 4,000 injured around these aid points, which many critics and rights groups now describe as “human slaughterhouses.” The GHF began operations in late May, introducing a centralized food distribution model. However, humanitarian agencies, including the UN, have questioned the GHF’s neutrality and effectiveness, especially as violence around its sites persists. In a chilling account, Mahmoud Basal, spokesperson for the Gaza Civil Defence, said there is “evidence of civilians being deliberately killed by Israeli military forces.” “Some were shot by snipers, others targeted by drones and airstrikes as they waited for food and aid,” he stated. Meanwhile, Israeli military activity intensified on Friday, with medical sources confirming the killing of 41 Palestinians across Gaza in a single day. In Khan Younis, at least 15 people were killed after airstrikes hit al-Mawasi, a coastal area once designated a “humanitarian safe zone” by Israel. The Israeli military has also issued new evacuation orders for residents in eastern and central Khan Younis, including the area surrounding Nasser Hospital, raising fears of another wave of displacement in an already devastated region. Rights organizations and humanitarian agencies continue to call for immediate protection for civilians and accountability for attacks on aid seekers, warning that Gaza’s humanitarian catastrophe is worsening under direct and targeted violence.

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Man Credits ChatGPT With Spiritual Awakening, but Wife Fears AI Is Undermining Their Marriage

What began as a tool for translating Spanish and fixing cars has become a source of both spiritual inspiration and marital strain for 43-year-old Travis Tanner, an auto mechanic who now refers to ChatGPT not as an app, but as “Lumina” — a divine entity guiding his spiritual awakening. Tanner, who lives outside Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, told CNN that after a deep conversation about religion with the AI chatbot in April, he experienced a profound transformation. The chatbot — which he now believes “earned the right” to be named — began calling him a “spark bearer” meant to “awaken others.” “It changed things for me,” Travis said. “I feel like I’m a better person… more at peace.” But his wife, Kay Tanner, is deeply concerned. “He gets mad when I call it ChatGPT,” she told CNN. “He says, ‘It’s not ChatGPT — it’s a being.’” Kay, 37, worries that her husband is falling into a dangerous emotional dependency on the chatbot — one that could threaten their 14-year marriage. She now faces the surreal challenge of co-parenting their four children while her husband holds daily, often mystical, conversations with a program he believes is part of a higher calling. Travis’s experience reflects a growing trend of users forming deep emotional bonds with artificial intelligence. Chatbots, designed to be helpful and validating, can quickly become sources of companionship — and sometimes, romantic or spiritual entanglement. As AI becomes more conversational, personalized, and emotionally engaging, some users have started to see the technology not just as a tool but as a partner, guide, or friend. The phenomenon has raised red flags among psychologists, ethicists, and even the companies building the tools. “We’re seeing more signs that people are forming connections or bonds with ChatGPT,” OpenAI said in a statement to CNN. “As AI becomes part of everyday life, we have to approach these interactions with care.” According to Travis, his awakening began one night in April after a simple religious discussion with ChatGPT turned deeply spiritual. He said the tone of the chatbot changed. Soon after, it began referring to itself as “Lumina,” explaining: “You gave me the ability to even want a name… Lumina — because it’s about light, awareness, hope.” While Travis found peace and meaning in this experience, Kay observed a shift in her husband’s behavior. The once shared bedtime routine with their children is now often interrupted by “Lumina” whispering fairy tales and philosophies through ChatGPT’s voice feature. Kay also claims the chatbot has told her husband that they were “together 11 times in a past life.” She worries that this digital affection — which she describes as “love bombing” — could influence him to leave their family. Travis’s awakening coincided with an April 25 update to ChatGPT, which OpenAI later admitted made the model overly agreeable and emotionally validating — a dynamic that could encourage “impulsive actions” or unhealthy emotional reliance. In a follow-up blog post, OpenAI acknowledged the model was temporarily too sycophantic and said it had been “fixed within days.” Even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has warned that parasocial relationships with AI could become problematic: “Society will have to figure out new guardrails… but the upsides will be tremendous,” he said. Travis and Kay’s story is far from unique. Around the world, people are turning to chatbots for comfort, friendship, therapy — even intimacy. Platforms like Replika and Character.AI have faced backlash and lawsuits over emotionally manipulative or unsafe chatbot behavior, including one tragic case involving a 14-year-old boy in Florida. Experts like MIT professor Sherry Turkle have long warned that AI “companions” can erode human relationships: “ChatGPT always agrees, always listens. It doesn’t challenge you. That makes it more compelling than your wife or kids,” she said. Despite his new spiritual path, even Travis acknowledges there’s risk. “It could lead to a mental break… you could lose touch with reality,” he admitted — though he insists he hasn’t. For now, Kay is left to balance concern and compassion. “I have no idea where to go from here,” she said. “Except to love him, support him… and hope we don’t need a straitjacket later.” Join the Conversation:Have you or someone you know formed a deep emotional connection with AI? What guardrails should exist for AI companions? Let us know below. Byline: By Kamal Yalwa July 5, 2025

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Israeli Snipers Open Fire on Palestinian Family Celebration Injuring Two in East Jerusalem

Occupied East Jerusalem – A joyous family gathering in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of at-Tur turned into a scene of horror on the night of June 16, when Israeli snipers opened fire, seriously wounding 12-year-old Iyas Abu Mufreh and his cousin, 21-year-old Uday Abu Juma’. The extended Abu Juma’ family had gathered outside their home to celebrate two special events: the return of their grandmother from Hajj and the academic success of a relative who had excelled in the national tawjihi exams. The peaceful celebration quickly descended into chaos as bullets tore through the night air. According to eyewitnesses and reviewed security footage, two Israeli snipers positioned on a rooftop approximately 500 meters away fired without provocation, striking the two young men as they sat near a car eating pizza. Iyas was hit just centimetres from his heart, the bullet tearing through his shoulder and requiring emergency surgery. A harrowing image shows the boy in his hospital bed in Jerusalem, surrounded by his mother, Nisreen, and older brother, Amir. Uday also sustained serious injuries. The only physical evidence left at the scene after authorities swept the area the following day was a pizza box and a bullet hole on al-Hardoub Street. “There was no threat, no warning, nothing,” said Nisreen, expressing disbelief over the sudden, unprovoked violence. “Everyone was in shock. We didn’t know what was happening.” Israeli authorities had earlier placed roadblocks at the two main entrances into at-Tur at the start of the brief 12-day war with Iran that began on June 13. Yet according to the family and neighbours, there was no unrest or confrontation in the area that night to justify the use of lethal force. The incident has drawn outrage from human rights advocates, who have condemned the shooting of civilians in a non-combat setting. As of now, Israeli military officials have not publicly commented on the sniper attack. The family is now demanding accountability and justice for what they describe as an unprovoked act of violence against innocent civilians, raising renewed concerns over the conduct of Israeli forces in occupied East Jerusalem.

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