Cameroon’s Paul Biya easily wins seventh term as president

Paul Biya has ruled Cameroon since 1982 [Lintao Zhang/Pool via Reuters]
Paul Biya has ruled Cameroon since 1982 [Lintao Zhang/Pool via Reuters]

Cameroon’s President Paul Biya, Africa’s oldest leader, has easily won a seventh term, according to the Constitutional Council.

Biya won 71.3 percent of the October 7 vote, far ahead of opposition candidate Maurice Kamto’s 14.2 percent, council president Clement Atangana said, announcing the official results in a state television broadcast.

The council, which was appointed by Biya, rejected all legal challenges to the election and called the vote free and fair.

Major cities saw heavy troop deployment on Monday as the government banned all opposition rallies.

The October 7 election had very low turnout in English-speaking regions after more than 200,000 fled fighting between Anglophone separatists and security forces.

Biya received over 75 percent of the vote in both regions.

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Monday Morning Digest: Cam Newton, Guts and Glory

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    Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

    It was a wild week of fourth-quarter comebacks, fourth-down conversions, two-point conversion gambles and games that came down to the final gun. If you couldn’t keep up with all the action, don’t panic! Digest is here to catch you up with everything you need to know, including: 

    Cam Newton‘s tough-guy performance against the Eagles

    • Mike Vrabel’s decision to go for broke by going for two

    • The utter randomness that is Bears football

    • The real reasons rookie quarterbacks don’t win football games any more

    • The NFL‘s most surprising, delightful non-issue

    …and much, much more!

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    Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

    Every once in a while, Cam Newton does something to remind you how great he is and how tough he is.

    That’s right, we said “tough.” We hear all you Cam haters yelling from the back of the bar. You’ve begrudgingly acknowledged his athleticism. But you want so badly to paint him as a pretty boy, all flash and no substance—a showoff with no guts.

    Well, not-so-tough Newton faced 4th-and-long late in the fourth quarter, after bringing the Panthers back from 17-0 to within a field goal and overcoming both a listless Panthers start and an Eagles pass rush that engulfed him for the entire first half.

    Newton shook off one defender, ejected the ball while being smothered by a second and somehow connected with Torrey Smith for a 35-yard catch-and-run that ultimately led to a game-winning touchdown and a 21-17 Panthers victory.

    Newton needed his scrambling ability to survive the first half and his underappreciated skills as a pocket passer to start the second-half comeback. But a 4th-and-10 conversion in a collapsed pocket against the defending champions requires resilience.

    Newton brought that, and the complete package, Sunday. And we’ve been seeing a lot of it this year.

    The Panthers are now 4-2, and they are much grittier than they are great. Newton is putting up quietly impressive numbers: 11 passing touchdowns, just four interceptions, a 65.6 percent completion rate (high for the risk-taking Newton), as well as 257 yards and three touchdowns rushing.

    And the Panthers are taking a cue from Newton’s personality—his real personality, not the caricature. They’re climbing off the turf after getting knocked down. They’re scratching for every yard. They’re either coming back or (last week in Washington) coming close—never out of a game until the final gun.

    Close wins and a gritty reputation may not be as foolproof a Super Bowl formula as your grandparents thought it was. Newton’s Panthers aren’t quite among the NFL’s elite teams. But three wins over the NFC East will help them once the playoff tiebreakers come.

    And anyone who remembers knows that when Newton and the Panthers start believing in each other, the rest of the league needs to watch out.

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    Mark LoMoglio/Associated Press

    It was another rough week for rookie quarterbacks. Baker Mayfield lost a heartbreaker to the Buccaneers. Sam Darnold’s Jets got pushed around by the Vikings. Josh Rosen got humiliated, then hurt, against the Broncos on Thursday night. And Josh Allen was forced to watch off-the-street veteran Derek Anderson throw three interceptions in his place in the Bills’ loss to the Colts.

    What’s wrong with our once-promising rookie QB class? Digest isn’t about to throw up its hands and say “Rookie Wall.” We’re here to dive a little deeper.

    Lack of support

    Sam Darnold dealt with dropped passes, botched snaps and terrible field position in the 37-17 Jets loss to the Vikings. And by dropped passes, we don’t mean 20-yard lasers off the fingertips of his receivers. We’re talking about easy checkdowns that could move the sticks bouncing off his receivers’ numbers.

    Josh Rosen faced similar issues Thursday night; his offensive line plays like a thin strand of police tape. The fact that Allen sometimes moved the ball for a Bills team that produces nothing but turnovers for every other quarterback speaks well to his potential.

    Bad situations

    It’s trendy these days for coaches and GMs to wait a year or two until their regimes are in real jeopardy before drafting a rookie quarterback. It’s like a young couple waiting until they’re having marital problems to have a baby, and it’s an equally sound decision.

    Baker Mayfield played well enough to win in the second half against the Buccaneers on Sunday, leading a comeback from 23-9 in the fourth quarter before the Buccaneers prevailed in overtime on the strength of a fumbled Browns punt return and a long field goal. The Browns committed 14 penalties for 114 yards in the loss, and their offensive game plan wavered between too conservative (Mayfield rarely got a chance to throw downfield in the first half) and too aggressive (two failed fourth-down conversions in field-goal range). Hue Jackson vowed to get more involved with the offense, which is his inimitable way of pushing blame onto offensive coordinator/inevitable successor Todd Haley. 

    If the Browns were a first-year rebuilding team, maybe overtime losses and ties would feel like moral victories instead of ticks on the Jackson countdown clock.

    Defensive coaches

    At least Mayfield is coached by offensive innovators Jackson and Haley. (They may be telling him two contradictory things, but that’s a separate issue.)

    First-year Cardinals head coach Steve Wilks, who rose through the defensive ranks, fired offensive coordinator Mike McCoy after Thursday night’s mess. McCoy may have earned the dismissal, but the Cardinals offense had “Defensive Coach” written all over it, from the decision to start safe-side adult Sam Bradford early in the year to the dull-as-drywall game plans to leaving Rosen in at the end of a blowout, resulting in a foot injury. (Defensive coaches think blowout fourth quarters against overwhelming opponents build toughness and character.)

    The Bills’ nonfunctional offense of handoffs and hope is built around the preference of head coach Sean McDermott, a defensive coach from the Panthers system, like Wilks. The Jets are built to the specifications of Todd Bowles, another defensive guy from an adjacent branch of the coaching tree.

    These coaches like coordinators who hate taking risks and—perhaps coincidentally—lack the kind of flashy resumes that can make a stodgy old linebacking coach look replaceable. Defensive coaches also explain how teams can wait two or three years before drafting a quarterback without building capable offensive lines or receiving corps: They are all searching for the perfect combination of gutsy linebackers.

    Unrealistic expectations

    Darnold gets compared to Joe Namath, Brett Favre or the Archangel Gabriel on the back pages of New York tabloids with every win. Baker Mayfield is expected to erase 18 years of quarterback futility and justify three years of Moneyball fasting. Both of their Sunday performances look better without superimposing decades of organizational failure over their stat sheets.

    Now here’s the bad news

    None of this baggage carried by rookie quarterbacks is going to go away this year. So expect more dropped passes, conservative game plans, injuries and coaching changes.

    Digest note: No, we have not forgotten Lamar Jackson, who produced a Wildcat highlight or two (including his first NFL touchdown this week) off the bench while learning from watching the stable-if-unspectacular Ravens offense. Sometimes, it pays to be the guy who got drafted late and doesn’t have to play right away. 

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    David Eulitt/Getty Images

    What happened

    Happy Bubble Smile Pony Rainbow Giggle Gumdrop Mahomes Time happened! Hooray! Let’s all hold hands and dance around the butterblossom tree!

    Sorry about that. Phew. They have to stop putting the Chiefs on Sunday night. All of the Patrick Mahomes magic, the hurdling Kareem Hunt highlights, the offensive gadgetry, the defense mixing in enough turnovers to keep all but the best opponents from catching up. It’s part hallucinogen, part aphrodisiac.

    One minute, you’re soberly breaking down the touchdown Demetrius Harris celebrated by leaping into the back-of-the-end-zone camera well or wondering how Mahomes can retrieve a fumbled snap and find Tyreek Hill open in the end zone. The next minute, the yummy twinkle dragon is taking you through the puffy cotton candy clouds to Shimmerstar Castle, where Andy Reid’s magical elves use candy canes to diagram plays for…oh dear, there we go again.

    What it means

    The Chiefs could have hung 60 points on the Bengals with better execution. They left a few open completions on the field. By the fourth quarter, they were running the ball at will, and the Bengals looked like they just wanted to go home.

    The Bengals are now 1-17 in prime-time road games under Marvin Lewis (h/t Rich Hribar of Rotoworld), so the “Bengals wilt in the spotlight” storyline is more of a cultural tradition than a lazy narrative. The Chiefs defense may have taken a step forward by allowing just 185 net yards before the final Bengals drive. But the Bengals were also bungling a bit. 

    Overall, Sunday night’s game demonstrated just how wide the gap is this season between a championship-caliber team playing at peak capacity and a wild-card-ish team just being itself.

    What’s next

    The Bengals host the Buccaneers in an early Sunday game next week, so they get to go back to being make-believe contenders.

    The Chiefs ride Brightwind the Pretty Pegasus to Gingerbread Grove…OK, we’ll stop. The Chiefs host a rematch with the Broncos, who are coming off a sugar rush of their own after walloping the poor Cardinals.

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    Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press

    Instead of providing the usual, semi-predictable commentary after a Patriots victory (“Gosh, this franchise may be going places…”), let’s talk about the Bears RP chart.

    Long before there were realistic video games, football-obsessed kids played dice games like Strat-o-Matic and APBA. Those games included charts for “RPs,” which stood for “Rare Plays” or “Ridiculous Plays.” On a certain roll, gamers consulted the RP charts for results that were unusual (missed field goals run back for touchdowns), unlikely (a kangaroo hopping onto the field and tucking the football in its pouch) or so fluky they could almost strain the game’s suspension of disbelief (the Bills scoring a passing touchdown).

    The Bears build entire games out of RPs. Heck, Tom Brady barely played for long stretches Sunday because the Bears were too busy stringing together daisy chains of zany, unpredictable nonsense.

    Luckily, Digest got hold of the RP chart used to determine the outcomes of Bears plays and series. So you don’t need to know what happened Sunday or what will happen next Sunday. Just roll two dice over and over, consult the instructions below, and you will know everything you need to know about Bears football:

    If the roll is: 

    2: The Bears recover a fumble on the kickoff!

    3: The Bears allow a kickoff-return touchdown.

    4: A defender drops a Mitch Trubisky interception in end zone. The Bears score on the next play.

    5: The Bears defense produces a big play.

    6: The Bears defense is completely fooled by screen pass.

    7: Trubisky misses a wide-open receiver (this is the most likely outcome, of course).

    8: Trubisky turns into Michael Vick briefly, scrambles 20 yards backward and then runs for a touchdown.

    9: Trubisky throws a worm-eater to a covered defender. But somehow, the defender digs a burrow beneath the receiver and intercepts the pass.

    10: A Bears punt is blocked!

    11: The Bears offense does something creative and magical, making you think, “Gosh, this team could be the Chiefs—but with a defense—if it could somehow exorcise all the stupid.”

    12: A last-gasp Hail Mary to tie the game is caught! …But it’s one yard shy of the end zone.

    But seriously…what’s next?

    The Patriots visit the Bills. The Bears host the Jets and then visit the Bills. Sounds like an easy win for the Patriots, while the Bears (rolls dice)…oh dear.

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    Jack Thomas/Getty Images

    What happened

    The team that treats scoring touchdowns like the end zone lies at the top of a cliff wall finally scored a pair of them. But a do-or-die two-point conversion proved to be a cliff too far.

    The Chargers scored on a pair of “drives” that combined to eat up just 2 minutes and 13 seconds of game time to build a 17-6 lead. The Titans, who were held without a touchdown in three of their last four games, possessed the ball for 21 minutes and six seconds in the first half but could only muster field goals.

    They finally cleared the blockage in their offense, first with a Derrick Henry run in the third quarter, then with a Marcus Mariota pass to Luke Stocker with 35 seconds left to make it a one-point game.

    Titans rookie head coach Mike Vrabel boldly elected to attempt a two-point conversion instead of tying the game with an extra point. A first attempt ended in a defensive holding penalty that moved the ball even closer to the goal line. A second attempt failed when Marcus Mariota could not connect with Taywan Taylor in the back of the end zone.

    What it means

    If you are one of those people who yell “Stupid call!” to make yourself sound informed after a coach takes a risk that fails, then the decision to go for two was a stupid call, and you knew it the moment it failed.

    If you love football and are honest with yourself, you agreed with the call, wished more coaches were daring in late-game situations and know that the probability of success was really high—especially after the penalty that placed the ball at the one-yard line.

    If you wondered, “Gee, Henry’s a heck of a power back and Mariota can run, so why did the Titans opt for a straight dropback pass that played to their weaknesses and the strengths of the Chargers defense instead of a sneak, dive or option?” then you are like millions of individuals who lack the self-outsmarting capability needed to be an NFL head coach.

    Last-second decisions aside, the Chargers won because they could score on explosive plays to Tyrell Williams and Mike Williams while the Titans had to matriculate down the field like a Knute Rockne team just to kick field goals. Big-play capability wins games in the NFL. The Chargers have it, the Titans completely lack it.

    Also, Keenan Allen threw a tantrum when the ball didn’t come his way in the end zone. But don’t worry about it: Allen is just a name on a fantasy roster to most casual sports fans, so he practically needs to beat Philip Rivers over the head with a shovel for it to register as a story on the Odell Beckhammeter.

    What’s next

    The Chargers enjoy a bye week before back-to-back road games in Seattle and Oakland, because forcing them to circle the globe a few times is a great way to sell season tickets! The Titans are also going on post-London bye, but no one will notice they are gone.

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    Stephen B. Morton/Associated Press

    Several games this week were just interesting/important to talk about but not interesting/important enough to talk about at any length. Here are brief briefings of games worth just a little bit of your attention:

    Redskins 20, Cowboys 17

    Washington has a stout front seven, the Cowboys a fast, aggressive defense, and both teams have the downfield-passing capability of a Pop Warner team playing in a blizzard. It made for a long afternoon in which each team picked up a first down or two before punting the other team into bad field position so it could do the same.

    A Dak Prescott fumble on his own goal line, forced by Ryan Kerrigan and recovered by Preston Smith, finally gave Washington a two-score, fourth-quarter lead, and the Cowboys’ failed comeback fell short because of a missed field goal by Dan Bailey’s Low-Cost Replacement Kicker Guy.

    Both Washington and Dallas can win games if they get early leads to squat on. Neither would be a team worth worrying about in a good division. Either could win the NFC East.

    Saints 24, Ravens 23

    The Saints were 4-of-5 on fourth-down conversions, including a Drew Brees sneak at the Ravens 18-yard line in the fourth quarter to set up a go-ahead touchdown instead of a game-tying field goal.

    The aggressiveness cut both ways—the Ravens set up a field goal with a 4th-and-long conversion early, and the Saints’ lone failure was a too-cute Taysom Hill option-pitch fumble deep in Ravens territory—but the Saints’ ability to dictate terms to opponents with a mix of unpredictable tactics and predictable Brees heroics has made them the second-best team in the NFC.

    The Ravens are exactly as good as their 4-3 record suggests.

    Texans 20, Jaguars 7

    Blake Bortles lost a pair of fumbles, one deep in his own territory, spotting the Texans a 20-0 lead and giving way to Cody Kessler. The Texans overcame their usual red-zone mishaps with the help of some sticky-fingered play by DeAndre Hopkins. The Jaguars defense was forced to defend a short field all game: The average Texans drive started on their own 37-yard line.

    Kessler threw for 156 yards, one touchdown and one interception in just under a half’s work. His “pesky guy” performance is sure to spark a quarterback controversy among those who ignore strip sacks and overrate six-yard passes at the end of losses. Unfortunately, there are people who think that way making decisions in the NFL. And it doesn’t take much to compare favorably to Bortles.

    Lions 32, Dolphins 21

    The Dolphins lost Albert Wilson early in this game, erasing Brock Osweiler’s hope of producing more dump-and-run touchdowns. The Dolphins kept things conservative until trailing 20-7, when Osweiler began quarterbacking just well enough to make the final score look close, making him the perfect replacement for Ryan Tannehill.

    Lions running back Kerryon Johnson gained 179 scrimmage yards on 21 touches. Offensive coordinator Jim Bob Cooter is running out of reasons to rotate Johnson out of the lineup in key situations, but he’s sure to come up with some fresh ones before next week’s visit from the Seahawks.

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    Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images

    Defender of the week: Aaron Donald recorded four sacks of C.J. Beathard and ripped the ball away from running back Matt Breida in a 39-10 Rams victory over the 49ers. Both Donald and teammate Michael Brockers shoved blockers into Beathard for sacks Sunday. So…if a defender throws a blocker at a quarterback, and that blocker’s full body weight lands on the quarterback, is that roughing the passer? We only ask because that’s likely to come up again in upcoming Rams (and 49ers) games.

    Offensive line of the week: The Colts offensive line has allowed one sack in the last three games and zero sacks in the last 11 quarters. It held a Bills team that does nothing well except sack quarterbacks without a sack Sunday while helping Marlon Mack and others combine for 220 rushing yards. So let’s hear it for the unheralded line of Anthony Castonzo (recently back from injury), rookie Quenton Nelson, Ryan Kelly, Mark Glowinski and rookie Braden Smith.

    Special teamer of the week: Cory Littleton of the Rams blasted right up the gut for his second blocked punt of the year and fourth of his career. Fortunately for Littleton, he plays in the NFC and is eligible to make the Pro Bowl as a specialist. In the AFC, Matthew Slater holds that Pro Bowl berth for life like he’s on the Supreme Court of Punt Coverage.

    Unprecedented special teams goat of the week: Justin Tucker missed the first extra point of his seven-year career. Naturally, the miss came on a last-minute, potentially game-tying attempt.

    Special teams sojourn of the week: Digest gives a special shoutout this week to Jets punt gunner Trenton Cannon, who got penalized on punt coverage for running out of bounds, running behind a row of players on the sideline, leaving MetLife Stadium, taking the jughandle onto Route 3, getting back into the stadium complex through the EZ-Pass lane on the New Jersey Turnpike and finally running back onto the field to help force Marcus Sherels out of bounds. Maybe we’re misremembering things a little, but Cannon really went out of his way to elude those Vikings blockers.

    No-safe-place-on-the-field award: Dolphins receiver Kenny Stills knocked over a security guard at Hard Rock Stadium after hauling in perhaps the prettiest pass Brock Osweiler has ever thrown. The injured security guard was on the ground for several minutes after the collision. Stills gave her the game ball, which was a nice touch, except she was still in obvious pain when he handed it to her. In the future, everyone seeking emergency medical attention will have to settle for souvenir footballs.

    Bad actor of the week: The Patriots attempted their own version of the Philly Special against the Bears, complete with Tom Brady wandering toward his right tackle and pretending to bark an adjustment so James White could take a direct snap. But while Nick Foles was a regular Daniel Day-Lewis in the Super Bowl, Brady was more like Ian Ziering in a deleted Sharknado scene. …Don’t flail your arms and telegraph your lines to the back row next time, and maybe White will gain more than one yard, oh Greatest Quarterback on Earth. Your cameo in Ted 2 was more organic and relatable, and that’s saying something.

    Fantasy leech of the week: There are four things in this world that you can count on: death, taxes, laundry and LeGarrette Blount siphoning touchdowns away from a better teammate. Blount waltzed into the end zone on a two-yard run so well-blocked (and poorly defended) that a toddler could have ridden a tricycle into the end zone. That means one more month of Blount getting goal-line carries while Kerryon Johnson does the little things, like rush for 158 yards.

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    Stacy Revere/Getty Images

    Easy money of the week: Digest took the Saints as three-point dogs and came away happy (despite some early scares) with a 24-23 outright win over the Ravens. The Saints are now 15-7-1 as road dogs since 2014, meaning the public (and house) always overreacts to their dome-team reputation. It always pays to bet the matchup, not the reps.

    Push points: The Buccaneers finished as 3.5-point favorites over the Browns at most books, but they were sitting at -3 for much of the week. That half-point proved huge, as many early wagers pushed, while later bets covered (for the Browns) or lost (for the Buccaneers). The 26-23 overtime final also slipped just below the 52 total. If you took the Browns and the under in a parlay, congratulations on your victory: You are either a psychic or a lifelong pessimist.

    Lines on the move: The Patriots went from 3.5- to 1.5-point favorites at Chicago when Rob Gronkowski was officially ruled out Sunday morning. If you saw the moving line and thought, “Hooray! More cushion for the Patriots!” you were vindicated by the 38-31 final. But had the Bears forced overtime by completing a Hail Mary into the end zone (like a normal team) instead of the one-yard line (like the Bears), catching that two-point line swing at just the right time could have made a difference.

    Backdoor cover lover: Folks who took the Lions -3 at Miami had to be frustrated as the Dolphins drove to the Lions 28-yard line in the final minute: A touchdown and two-point conversion would have cut the Lions’ lead to 32-29, setting up a likely push. Fortunately, the Dolphins attempted (and missed) a field goal with 53 seconds left. There’s nothing better for preventing a backdoor push than the baked-in mediocrity of the Miami Dolphins.

    Overwatch: The 58.5 over kept the Chiefs’ blowout of the Bengals interesting until the final moments, when the Chiefs turned the ball over on downs at the Cincinnati 5-yard line and Bengals backup quarterback Jeff Driskel waved the surrender flag instead of driving for a meaningless score. The Chiefs offense and defense remain solid plays to clear reasonable overs, but it takes two to tango. Opening numbers for Chiefs-Broncos next week were not yet posted at press time; don’t be fooled by the 45 the Broncos hung on the Cardinals, and be wary of trying to clear anything over about 52.5.

    Undertale: The Colts and Bills slipped under the 43-point number with a 37-5 final, thanks to utter Bills defensive ineptitude. Avoid the Bills when wagering. Or picking fantasy lineups. Or watching television. …The Cowboys missed a potential game-tying field goal in the final seconds that would have almost guaranteed that the Cowboys-Redskins game would clear the 41.5 over in overtime. The Cowboys are now 8-15 at clearing the over since 2017. The public still sees high-flying America’s Team; the point totals suggest the Ravens with better marketing.

    Monday night action (New York Giants +4.5 at Atlanta Falcons): The secret to enjoying Falcons football is to take their opponent and the over; that way, you’re rooting for touchdowns and inevitability instead of, you know, the soul crushers. Taking the Giants can be a tough sell, but Digest locked them at +4.5 on a parlay with a reasonable 54.5 over and a sweet +270 payout. With Odell Beckham Jr. and Eli Manning in BFF mode and the Falcons unlikely to beat any team by more than a field goal, Tuesday morning coffee is on Digest, guaranteed.

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    Jack Dempsey/Associated Press

    Your weekly look at what’s going on off the field.

    John Elway appears in a political campaign ad seemingly endorsing a pro-fracking proposition.

    Point: The ad doesn’t mention fracking (because, you know, it’s terrible), so the only evidence that Elway endorses something really environmentally sketchy is when he says, “Next year, come see your Broncos play at Sea Level Stadium.”

    Counterpoint: When aliens try to determine why humans willfully caused our own extinction by fracking our way into a supervolcanic eruption, they’ll uncover this ad and say, “Oh, it’s because the guy who drafted Paxton Lynch thought it was a good idea!”

    The NFL is investigating how Ryan Tannehill was suddenly deactivated last week after not appearing on midweek injury reports.

    Point: The investigation has been hampered so far because even trained professionals cannot think about Ryan Tannehill’s career without lapsing into a zzzzzzzzzzzz…

    Counterpoint: Tannehill was ruled out in favor of Brock Osweiler this week, so either his condition is worsening, the Dolphins were hiding an injury or Osweiler himself is a communicable disease. 

    The NFL grows worried about the long-term viability of the Chargers in Los Angeles.

    Point: The league knew things were bad when it saw Philip Rivers handing out copies of a screenplay in a Rodeo Drive Starbucks.

    Counterpoint: Gosh, if only the L.A. move hadn’t worked out the exact way anyone who was paying attention was certain it would work out.

    Jaguars owner Shahid Khan withdraws bid to purchase Wembley Stadium.

    Point: Remember NFL owners’ ability to competitively bid for the most storied sports arenas on Earth the next time they float a $400 million bond and a 15-cent-per-bottle baby formula tax to install massage chairs in their luxury boxes.

    Counterpoint: OK, so the Chargers are miserable in Los Angeles and the Jaguars won’t move to London anytime soon. Anyone else have any bright relocation ideas? (Looks around like an angry teacher about to give a pop quiz.) Not you, Mark! What about the rest of you? Are you ready to just sit still and let the money trucks pull into your driveways? Good owners! You all get smiley-face stickers!

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    Jason E. Miczek/Associated Press

    Roger Goodell did not address the protests during the national anthem at the owners meetings this week.

    Instead, he addressed the issues that spurred the protests.

    “The focus of both the NFLPA and the NFL, the clubs and our players has been to focus on the effort of the players on the issues they have raised and how we can make their communities better,” the commissioner told reporters. He went on to talk about criminal justice reform and Let’s Listen Together, a Players Coalition initiative to bring police and community leaders together, which is now represented on the NFL’s website.

    This is a radical departure for Goodell and the league. Just a few months ago, the NFL (or at least powerful factions within it) still wanted to silence the protests during the anthem. Now, Goodell is practically speaking the language of the protesters.

    Even more surprising: There was no outcry from a White House presumably distracted by more important political matters, like the ancestries of senators.

    There’s nothing particularly radical or partisan about attending some town halls or backing some common-sense legislation. Or at least there shouldn’t be. Today’s political polarization often boils down to those who listen versus those who don’t, those who believe versus those who don’t, those who care versus those who blame and mock.

    NFL owners must have finally taken a long, sober look at whom they were trying to appease and whom they risked alienating. Or they finally realized how counterproductive stoking an ever-dwindling protest was. Or the owners with real sympathy and compassion for their players and communities (there are several) won the day.

    However it happened, the NFL was rewarded—not with forced silence from a suppressed protest but with a quiet news cycle dominated by touchdowns, not politics.

    Not everyone is happy on the players’ side. Eric Reid, in particular, remains a firebrand among firebrands, accusing Players Coalition leader Malcolm Jenkins of “selling us out” for making the overtures that led to the current peace. But Reid’s (very personal-sounding) anger doesn’t give with the reality. Players can still protest. But with the league willing to talk about the issues, the protest will fall on far fewer deaf ears. The goal of the anthem protests was to open hearts and change minds. The NFL’s revised priorities are a sign of success.

    Taking a side can be good for business, if you take the logical one. The NFL finally caught on. Let’s hope others do, too.

    Note: Point spreads from OddsShark, and splits and trends from TeamRankings.com.

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Israeli forces kill Palestinian in Hebron after alleged stabbing

A series of deadly incidents have increased tensions in the West Bank this month.[Abdel al-Hashlamoum/EPA-EFE]
A series of deadly incidents have increased tensions in the West Bank this month.[Abdel al-Hashlamoum/EPA-EFE]

Israeli forces have shot dead a Palestinian man in the city of Hebron in the occupied West Bank after he allegedly tried to stab an Israeli soldier, Palestinian WAFA news agency said. 

The Palestinian was identified by local media as 42-year-old Moammar Arif Refa’ey al-Atrash from Hebron. 

The Palestinian health ministry said the Israeli military had informed the Palestinian District Coordinating Office of the killing, without formally identifying the victim.

Palestinians living in the area reported hearing shots and then seeing a Palestinian man motionless on the ground surrounded by soldiers before he was taken away in an Israeli ambulance.

The Israeli army said in a statement it had killed the Palestinian after he tried to stab an Israeli soldier.

“An assailant attempted to stab a soldier adjacent to the Cave of the Patriarchs, lightly injuring him. The soldier and other forces at the scene responded with live fire,” the army’s statement read. 

Israeli soldiers killed a Palestinian youth in the center of herbron city / west Bank#breaking_news pic.twitter.com/jweO8nl1Er

— ‎‎‎#GreatReturnMarch (@aoroaman) October 22, 2018

A series of deadly incidents have increased tensions in the West Bank this month.

WATCH: Palestine says US can’t mediate Israeli-Palestinian peace process (01:59)

On October 15, a Palestinian was shot dead after allegedly stabbing an Israeli soldier in the northern West Bank, while a few days earlier, Aisha Al-Rawbi, a 47-year-old Palestinian mother of eight was killed after Israeli settlers threw stones at the car she was travelling in. 

The West Bank was occupied by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War. Palestinians want the territory as part of their future state. 

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Bolton faces Moscow grilling over Trump’s weapons treaty threat

US National Security Adviser John Bolton is facing two days of tense talks with Russia following criticism from Moscow over US President Donald Trump‘s threat to unilaterally withdraw from a decades-old nuclear arms-control deal between the two countries.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and President Vladimir Putin will seek clarification about Trump’s plans at respective meetings with Bolton on Monday and Tuesday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Sunday.

Peskov’s comments came as Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov warned Trump’s pledge to “terminate” the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty would be a “very dangerous” move.

“[Withdrawal] won’t be understood by the international community, but [instead] arouse serious condemnation of all members of the world community, who are committed to security and stability and are ready to work on strengthening the current regimes in arms control,” Ryabkov said on Sunday, according to Russia’s state-owned Tass news agency.

Historic pact

The INF, which banned all nuclear and conventional missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500km, was signed in 1987 at a Cold War-era Washington summit between then-US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General-Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev.

Washington and Moscow have traded barbs over the accord since, accusing one another on several occasions of breaching the terms of the landmark treaty.

US officials believe Moscow is developing and has deployed a ground-launched system in breach of the INF treaty that could allow it to launch a nuclear attack on Europe at short notice.

Russia, meanwhile, has claimed that parts of the US’ missile defence shield, specifically equipment hosted by its NATO allies in Europe, contravene the agreement.

On Saturday, Trump said Russia had violated the INF for “many years” and vowed to pull the US out of the pact. Russia has repeatedly denied allegations that it has contravened the treaty.

“We’re not going to let them violate a nuclear agreement and go out and do weapons [while] we’re not allowed to,” he said.

Gorbachev, who, as the last president of the Soviet Union prior to its dissolution in 1991, introduced a series of reforms which helped bring about the end of the Cold War, said Trump’s move was “not the work of a great mind”, however.

“Under no circumstances should we tear up old disarmament agreements,” Gorbachev said, according to the Russia-based Interfax news agency.

Gorbachev’s comments were echoed by a number of Russian legislators, with the head of the foreign affairs committee in Russia’s upper house of parliament Konstantin Kosachev warning Washington’s withdrawal would mean “mankind is facing full chaos in the nuclear weapons sphere”.

International concern

Several international powers also expressed concern over Trump’s comments.

On Monday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said Beijing was opposed to a US withdrawal from the pact.

“Unilateral withdrawal will have a multitude of negative effects,” Chunying told reporters at a press conference.

Germany’s chief diplomat, meanwhile, said Washington’s move was “regrettable”,

“The treaty … has for 30 years been an important pillar of our European security architecture,” Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said in a statement on Sunday.

We have often urged Russia to address serious allegations that it is violating the agreement. We now urge the US to consider the possible consequences,” Maas added.

US ally Britain, however, said it would stand “absolutely resolute” alongside Washington over the issue.

UK Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson told UK newspaper the Financial Times that Russia was to blame for endangering the INF treaty and called on the Kremlin to “get its house in order”.

“We, of course, want to see this treaty continue to stand but it does require two parties to be committed to it and at the moment, you have one party that is ignoring it. It is Russia that is in breach,” Williamson said.

Domestic response

Trump’s announcement drew mixed opinion among his Republican Party legislators in Washington. 

Senator Rand Paul said withdrawing from the pact would be a “big, big mistake”, while Senate colleague Lindsey Graham praised the US president for taking “absolutely the right move”, adding “the Russians have been cheating.”

The US last withdrew from a major arms treaty with Russia was in 2002, when then-President George W Bush abandoned the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty.

The ABM pact banned Washington and Moscow from deploying nationwide anti-ballistic missile defence systems.

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How to Win Florida

Rick Scott faced a tough race for governor in 2010, when his Democratic opponent, Alex Sink, did surprisingly well in the rural Republican counties of North Florida. But turnout lagged in the urban Democratic counties of South Florida, and Scott eked out a 1 percent victory.

Scott faced another tough race in 2014, when his Democratic opponent, Charlie Crist, focused on improving turnout in those urban strongholds. But while Crist expanded Sink’s margins in South Florida by about 100,000 votes, Scott expanded his own margins in North Florida by almost exactly the same amount–and eked out another 1 percent victory.

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Florida is the ultimate swing state, the land of the political cliffhanger. Donald Trump also won it by 1 percent over Hillary Clinton in 2016. Barack Obama won it by 1 percent over Mitt Romney in 2012. George W. Bush famously (or, for some, notoriously) won it by just 537 votes over Al Gore in 2000. If you add up the 50 million votes Floridians have cast in the past seven presidential elections, a mere 20,000 votes separate the two parties—about 0.04 percent. Nobody knows whether Scott will unseat Bill Nelson in perhaps this year’s highest-profile Senate race, or whether Democrat Andrew Gillum will defeat Republican Ron DeSantis to succeed Scott in perhaps this year’s highest-stakes governor’s race, or whether Trump will win Florida again in 2020—but it’s a good bet that all those races will be close.

That’s why confident proclamations of the key to victory in Florida—the I-4 corridor bisecting the state, or the Hispanic vote, or the independent vote, or the money race—tend to be incorrect. Statewide elections here are such nail-biters that there’s rarely one key to victory. Yes, Democrats need big numbers from their base in southeast Florida’s Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach megalopolis, but they also need to hold down Republican numbers in North Florida and southwest Florida. Yes, the influx of Puerto Ricans and other Hispanics to cities like Orlando should help Democrats, but the influx of conservative white seniors to retirement communities like The Villages should help Republicans.

When the margins are this thin, everything matters—persuading the middle as well as firing up the base, white turnout as well as minority turnout, television ads as well as field operations, not to mention candidate positions on health care, oil drilling and dozens of other issues that can move swing voters. And the national climate also matters—enough to save Scott in the anti-Obama wave years of 2010 and 2014, perhaps enough to doom him in his Senate race and make Gillum the state’s first black governor if there’s an anti-Trump backlash in 2018.

“It’s not about doing this or that. You have to do this and that,” says Steve Schale, a Democratic strategist who blogs about the intricacies of Florida politics. “Florida is a mosaic, and you have to manage your margins everywhere.”

There are multiple Floridas within that mosaic, and they all require different strategies. North Florida is really the southernmost section of the Deep South; it’s reliably Republican, especially on cultural issues like guns and abortion, but it has large pockets of black Democrats in Tallahassee and Jacksonville. Southeast Florida feels like a cross between the southernmost borough of New York City and the northernmost nation of Latin America; it’s reliably Democratic, but with clusters of Cuban-American Republicans in the Miami area and country-club Republicans around Trump’s winter home of Palm Beach. Just across the Everglades, southwest Florida is a fast-growing retirement mecca for Midwestern Rotarians who like the sunshine, the lack of an income tax and the Republican Party. Even the I-4 corridor, the purplest region of the purplest state, is less of a bipartisan melting pot than a battleground between multi-ethnic Democratic cities and white Republican exurbs.

“There’s not just one place that matters,” says David Johnson, a Republican consultant in Florida and a former adviser to Gov. Jeb Bush. “Every place matters.”

Florida does have a few competitive suburban counties that tend to predict statewide winners. Pinellas on the west coast and St. Lucie on the east coast both flipped from Obama to Trump. Mostly, though, Florida politics is about managing margins. More than 50 of Florida’s 67 counties are safely Republican, but the nine safely Democratic counties include the five largest: Miami-Dade, Broward (which includes Fort Lauderdale), Palm Beach, Hillsborough (which includes Tampa) and Orange (which includes Orlando). Democrats need to run up the score in the big cities; Republicans need to run up the score everywhere else. If Sink had done as well as Crist in South Florida, Scott wouldn’t have been elected; if Crist had done as well as Sink in North Florida, Scott wouldn’t have been reelected. Hillary Clinton outperformed Obama in the Democratic strongholds, but she lost the election in Republican areas like Pasco County outside Tampa, where Romney beat Obama by only 6 points and 14,000 votes, and Trump crushed her by 21 points and 52,000 votes.

The good news for Democrats is that Florida keeps getting browner every year. White voters are now about 64 percent of the registered electorate, down two points since 2016. University of South Florida professor Susan McManus says the electorate is also getting younger, which helps Democratic candidates, even though younger voters are the least likely to affiliate with a party. The good news for Republicans is that historically, older and whiter voters are likelier to vote in Florida—and in 2016, they were even likelier than usual to vote Republican. If Clinton had matched Obama’s performance with white voters, she would have won the state. And nine of Florida’s 10 fastest-growing metropolitan areas voted for Trump, expanding Republican margins in communities like The Villages and Cape Coral.

Republicans have a big additional advantage in midterms that helps explain why they control almost every statewide office in such an evenly divided state. Florida’s turnout rates typically drop from about 75 percent in presidential years to around 50 percent in off years—but there’s less of a drop among the older white voters who skew Republican, and more of a drop among blacks, Hispanics and younger voters. In 2014, turnout in all five big Democratic counties lagged below the statewide average, bottoming out at 41 percent in Miami-Dade.

Somehow, Democrats need to get their people to the polls in a nonpresidential year—and even though Nelson has won five statewide races, the laconic 75-year-old centrist is not exactly an energizing figure. But Gillum, the charismatic 39-year-old mayor of Tallahassee, is a rally-the-base kind of Democrat who ran to the left of his four white rivals in his primary. He could help Nelson by turning out some of the blacks, liberals and millennials who were notably unenthusiastic about Clinton.

“The biggest question mark is young voters,” says Susan McManus, a professor of politics at the University of South Florida. “They just haven’t come out when there hasn’t been a draw.”

It is possible that Gillum could be that draw, running as an unapologetic avatar of America’s majority-minority, urban-cosmopolitan future. Democrats don’t seem to be registering a huge wave of new voters, but they don’t need to make huge inroads to flip the state; they just need to squeeze out 1 extra percentage point. Local issues could also reshape state races; an outcry over toxic algae that’s suffocating beachfront towns like Stuart, Sarasota and Sanibel has put Scott and other Republicans on the defensive on environmental issues.

Scott has been trying to distance himself from Trump and run to the center, while making a significant effort to reach out to Hispanic voters. Nelson has tried without much success so far to remind Hispanics that Scott has been a strong Trump ally and an even stronger opponent of Obamacare. Even in a Democratic year, if Scott can hold down Nelson’s margins in Puerto Rican enclaves like Kissimmee and expand his own margins with Republican-leaning Cubans and Venezuelans, he might be able to outweigh a negative Trump effect. DeSantis won his primary on an I-love-Trump platform, appearing almost daily on Fox News to denounce special counsel Robert Mueller and other Trump enemies, carrying the overwhelming white Trump base to victory, but he is now trying to tack to the center as well; his first general-election ad was about his plans for restoring the Everglades. And while Gillum was initially expected to struggle to hold down Republican margins in the whiter and more conservative sections of the state, he has attracted surprisingly large and enthusiastic crowds in GOP strongholds like rural Palatka, algae-choked Stuart, and even The Villages, flexing the kind of crossover appeal that won Obama the state twice.

Florida is changing every day, and in a 50-50 state, even subtle shifts in the electorate can shift outcomes. For example, older Miami-area Cuban-Americans are still mostly Republican, and cheered Trump’s moves to undo Obama’s outreach to the island, but younger Cubans who didn’t grow up under the Castro regime are trending Democratic. They seem to care less about anticommunist politics than affordable health care, which helps explain why Obama’s only 2012 ads promoting Obamacare were on Spanish-language TV in Miami. Similarly, Republican Sarasota County is attracting more northeastern Democrats who think southeast Florida has gotten too crowded and expensive, while Republican Polk County is attracting more Puerto Ricans who come to work in the Disney-area tourism industry. On the other hand, The Villages is attracting even more Republican retirees; Trump increased Romney’s margin there by nearly 40,000 votes.

On Election Day, Schale says he’ll be watching the returns out of Pasco and Sarasota Counties, to see if Nelson and other Democrats can claw back some of the gains Trump made with white suburbanites. He’ll also want to see how many of the black voters in Tallahassee and Jacksonville who helped carry Obama to victory but stayed home for Clinton will turn out in a midterm election. And he’ll want to know which way independents are breaking, because a few persuadable voters can swing a Florida election.

“These races start out 47-47, maybe even 48-48,” Schale says. “But that means the narrow sliver in the middle can be really important.”

Ultimately, though, the results might have less to do with these multiple micro-trends than one orange-haired macro-trend. If Trump is wildly unpopular in Florida in November, Democrats will overperform. If he isn’t, they won’t. Digital ads and Medicaid proposals and get-out-the-vote robocalls will matter, but politics today is about Trump. He’ll matter more.

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Bafel Talabani: ‘Every Kurd wants an independent Kurdistan’

Editor’s note: Below is an abridged version of the interview with Bafel Talabani, which was conducted a day before the electoral commission announced the final results of the September 30 parliamentary vote in Iraq’s Kurdish region.

Sulaymaniyah, Iraq – Over the past year, Iraq has seen a number of major political developments, including the fallout of the Kurdish independence referendum, the May national elections, and the September parliamentary vote in the Kurdish region.

Earlier this month, after a delay due to intra-Kurdish disagreements, Barham Salih, a member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) was elected president of Iraq (a position reserved for an ethnic Kurd) by the newly formed Iraqi parliament.

Currently, important negotiations are being held between different political powers regarding the formation of a new Iraqi government, a new Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), and the future of Kirkuk, which was taken over by forces loyal to the Iraqi government in Baghdad from the KRG in October 2017.

The PUK, which is seen as being close to Iran, and one of its leaders, Bafel Talabani (the son of the late Jalal Talabani, one of the founders and long-term leader of the party), have played a key role in all of these events.

In this exclusive interview, Al Jazeera talks to Mr Talabani about the political situation in the Kurdish region of Iraq, a year after the failed independence referendum, the KRG’s relations with Baghdad, and the US-Iran rivalry in the country.

Al Jazeera: Why did it take so long to elect a president after the parliamentary elections?

 Bafel Talabani: I think if you look over the last few elections we have had, it’s always taken a long time.

There are a lot of different groups jockeying for different positions. Lots of deals that have to be made and partnerships to be formed. I don’t think it took a particularly long time to be honest.

Al Jazeera: But there were negotiations happening between your party, the (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP).

Talabani: Yes, there were.

Al Jazeera: And there seemed to be disagreements along the way.

Talabani: There was a little disagreement along the way but perhaps not as big a disagreement as it’s being shown in the media.

We think really there was not enough time to make a decision. We used to have a strategic alliance with the KDP and the strategic alliance was that the KDP would have – or one of the parties – would have the regional president and in return the other party would have the president in Baghdad.

This became complicated the position of president in the north has been put on hold.

As the position has been put on hold, the powers of the president have been spread among the prime minister and certain other places. So it seemed difficult for us, as the PUK, to have both presidents in effect with the KDP.

So what we wanted to do was make some kind of an arrangement where Dr Barham [Salih], the PUK candidate, was the candidate of the Kurds as a whole.

Unfortunately, there didn’t seem to be enough time to manage these negotiations with the KDP. So what happened was both parties ended up going to Baghdad with two different candidates.

This saddened me a great deal because I would have preferred the Kurds to have made their own decisions before going to Baghdad.

Al Jazeera: So what is the situation now between the two parties?

Talabani: The situation between the two parties I think is not so difficult to overcome. There have been issues between the KDP and the PUK for a few years. And to be fair a lot of those issues have been caused more by the PUK than the KDP.

The PUK has had problems internally. Imam Jalal [Talabani] became sick and then sadly passed away. The PUK had lots of issues amongst itself, issues of confidence, issues of direction, issues of unity. And because of this it’s been very difficult to make concrete and strategic deals with the KDP, with Gorran [Movement].

But now a more unified and cohesive PUK is able now to make the appropriate agreements and alliances with all the political parties that it needs to do.

Al Jazeera: How are negotiations going for the new Kurdish regional government (KRG)?

Talabani: I think we will have soon a Kurdish government. What happened was that the elections had gone ahead and there were complaints from many different parties about certain irregularities. So it’s up to the commission and if necessary the court to look at this and make a final decision.

I don’t think it’s taking a particularly long time. And what I’m aware of in the next few days, the results will be made [public].

Al Jazeera: Another issue that seems to cause a lot of disagreement between the two major Kurdish parties is Kirkuk.

Currently the governor there was appointed by Baghdad but he has been elected to parliament, so there needs to be a new governor.

So are there negotiations or even a competition for who will take this governorship?

Talabani: I don’t think it’s necessarily fair [to say] there is a competition for the governorship. What I would like to see happen is for the PUK and KDP to sit down together and work through these issues.

I think with one voice, we would be much stronger in our position to influence things in Kirkuk and Baghdad. And in fact, we’ve already reached out to the KDP.

When our team was in Baghdad for government formation, the first person we called was the KDP delegation and offered to sit together and help each other get the ministries we want. And the same thing has happened regarding Kirkuk.

We reached out to the KDP and said, look we want to have a meeting of all parties where we can sit down and discuss Kirkuk and the best way to move forward.

Again, I really want to stress unity, unity, unity. And I think if we can do that, we can get past the other issues holding us back. I really think we can move Kurdistan forward in the next four years.

Al Jazeera: What are these other issues? What is the biggest problem between the KDP and the PUK?

Talabani: Honestly, I think the biggest problem is bad experiences of the past, of deals and contracts and negotiations that haven’t been fulfilled. And you’d speak to most people and they would say – they did it, we did it. I think the reality of the situation is that both parties are responsible.

Both parties have made errors. I’m optimistic for our partnership with the KDP. The friendships in the PUK and the KDP are very deep.

Some of the people I most respect politically and as people are members of the KDP, people like Nechirvan Barzani, obviously Kak Masoud [Barzani] himself, Kak Masrour [Barzani], etc.

Al Jazeera: Are there negotiations going on between the caretaker KRG and Baghdad on resuming the production of oil in Kirkuk?

Talabani: I couldn’t actually answer you on this one with any kind of authority or information. It’s not something I’m dealing with and to be honest not something I want to deal with.

But I would be very surprised if somebody wasn’t talking about how this pipeline is going to be.

Al Jazeera: Over the past year there have been quite a few deals made with Russia’s Rosneft, which has taken over the oil pipeline. Are these deals in the interest of the KRG?

Talabani: I would be very surprised if the KRG did things after all this investigation and communication that wasn’t good for the KRG, whether Baghdad sees it as good for the KRG, I can’t really speak for.

Again the only way to get past this is for Baghdad and the KRG to sit down together and see what areas are disputed.

Al Jazeera: There seems to be anger at least in certain quarters in Iraq about Iranian influence or interference in the affairs of the country. How do you see that?

Talabani: It’s unrealistic to expect other countries not to want to influence this situation. But the solution is very simple.

I think the Iraqi political parties and the Iraqi people have to simply do what’s best for Iraq and not get involved in external struggles.

 Kurdish voters cast their ballots during the Iraqi parliamentary elections at a polling station in Erbil on May 2018. [File:Gailan Haji/EPA] HAJI 

Al Jazeera: You are known to have good relations with both Iran and the US. What are your relations right now under the Trump administration with the US?

And how do you see continuing US presence in Iraq?

Talabani: I’d like to think our relations are very good. The United States of America have been a strategic ally for us for many, many years in the fight against terrorism, etc. I’d like to see the relationship get stronger. I’d like to see a US presence here for many, many years to come.

I think we have some trips planned soon to the United States and things will become clearer then. But everybody we are currently in contact with here, Brett McGurk, the ambassador, the general consul – the relationship has been very, very good. There have been trying times of course. The issue with the referendum strained things a little, but I think in general we have a very good relationship with the United States – something we wish to keep.

Al Jazeera: But the Trump administration is building an anti-Iran coalition here in the region attracting a number of political forces here to join that coalition against Iran.

Where does the PUK stand on this?

Talabani: I think the PUK really has no desire to become involved in regional conflicts.

We have enough financial, security, and stability issues in Kurdistan. We have a long relationship with Iran going back many years. And many times Iran has helped us and many times Iran has hindered us. I think it’s unrealistic to expect the PUK, or any other Kurdish party or any other Iraqi party, to cut ties and political relations with Iran.

The reality of the situation is we have hundreds of kilometres of borders with Iran. The majority of trade in the Sulaymaniyah region is with Iran.

Al Jazeera: Should the Kurdish region have one unified armed force rather than forces loyal to different parties?

Talabani: I’d love to see that happen. I think we are slowly moving in that direction. But every time we have some kind of political setback. I think if you want the honest truth, I think people are afraid. People are afraid of something new and it’s a huge change for Kurdistan.

But I would really like to see that, to see one untied Kurdish security apparatus, military apparatus, etc. And I think we can move towards that and I think it would help the political process here. It would help normalise Kurdistan. It would change the dynamic of the region I think for the better. It’s something I wish to try to work on over the next four years.

Al Jazeera: This year, it’s 20 years since the end of the civil war between the two Kurdish parties and some Kurds worry that the tensions between the KDP and the PUK can escalate into an armed conflict.

Is this possible?

Talabani: Over my dead body. And over the dead body of many, many Kurds. This is just not something that will happen. I think nobody is willing to do that anymore. Those days are long gone. We are still paying the price of that internal conflict.

Kurds will not, should not, and absolutely must not be allowed to kill Kurds. We need to be able to resolve our issues politically.

I think this is the absolute doomsday scenario that every Kurd with a single brain cell would do everything in their power to make (sure) this never, never happens and I can’t see it happening.

Al Jazeera: Do you think the Kurdish political elite has failed its people?

Talabani: I think to say that it has failed its people is a little harsh. But if we are very honest with each other, we could have all done better.

Saddam [Hussein] hasn’t been in Kurdistan for decades now. When I look at Kurdistan, I think the situation with electricity still isn’t as good as it should be. The situation with sewage still isn’t as good as it should be.

The situation with roads and infrastructure still isn’t as good as it should be. But some of it is also down to the curse of oil. Kurdistan is a very mineral-rich.

Cityscape of Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, Iraq [Getty Images]

Al Jazeera: Some say that politics in Iraq is run like a family business. What do you say to that?

Talabani: I think you could make that argument.

You could make that argument to a lesser degree in the United States, you could make that argument in many, many countries. I think that nobody in any family should be in a position of power just because they are in that family and they are in that position of power.

But on the opposite of that, I don’t think someone should be held back from politics if they are working in the party and are doing well and are trying to improve the situation. A family name shouldn’t be held against them.

Al Jazeera: And this sense, then do you support the cause for this next government of Iraq to be technocratic?

Talabani: I think that the government of Iraq needs a mixture of everybody.

We need some technocrats but we also need some strong political figures that can hold everything together.

This is after all Iraq and it has its unique set of problems and its difficulties.

Al Jazeera: Is the PUK after specific posts within that cabinet?

Talabani: No, it’s not.

I think the PUK has always been part of the solution for problems in Iraq and we want to be back to being there. We want to part of the solution, not to be part of the problem.

I would like the PUK to work more with Baghdad, increase its presence in Baghdad, ideally side-by-side with the other Kurdish parties because if you look at our seats in Parliament, we are so strong in Baghdad if we are united.

That’s what I would like to see happen and I think it’ll happen.

Al Jazeera: So is the future of the Kurdish region within the borders of Iraq? Is independence out of question?

Talabani: I don’t think independence is out of question and I don’t think it’s an issue that needs addressing now. We have so many current problems, we have so many issues that we need to overcome.

We need to be part of Iraq, the strength of the region for now for us is through Baghdad. And I think every Kurd wants an independent Kurdistan but the reality of the situation is that this cannot happen unilaterally.

Baghdad, some of the surrounding countries have to agree to this and we have to make movements towards that very carefully in a considered diplomatic manner.

Al Jazeera: What are your personally ambitions and where do you see yourself? Do you see yourself taking leadership of the party?

Do you see yourself staying a military man?

Talabani: I’d like to see a unified PUK. For me, frankly, who’s in charge is not important. But I’d like to see a unified strong PUK with the other Kurdish party moving Kurdistan forward.

I’d like to see many different policies implemented for the good of the people. Some anti-corruption policies.

We need to change the way we hold our elections. We need to move forward together with all the parties. My personal ambitions are that.

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Egypt arrests economist Abdel Khalik Farouk over ‘critical book’

Farouk was arrested, reportedly over his book entitled entitled “Is Egypt really a poor country?” [Screenshot via Youtube]

Egyptian police have arrested economist Abdel Khalik Farouk after the publication of his book in which he is critically analysing the country’s economic and social crises, the author’s wife and a lawyer said.

Farouk’s detention on Sunday came days after local media reported that copies of his book, entitled “Is Egypt really a poor country?” were seized by authorities from a publisher.

Farouq’s wife told Reuters news agency that three policemen who came to their home said the arrest was in connection with the book.

She was later allowed to deliver food, medicine and clothes to him at a local police station, she said.

“He was officially arrested and will be presented to the state security prosecutor tomorrow because of this book,” AFP news agency cited Gamal Eid, a lawyer, as saying.

According to Eid, who heads the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, the prosecutor would specify the main charges against Farouk on Monday.

Since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi came to power in 2014, human rights groups have accused Egyptian authorities of muzzling all dissent.

The authorities say they aim to fight against terrorism and the “spreading of false information”.

WATCH: Will death sentences deter Sisi’s opponents?

SOURCE:
News agencies

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It’s Not Just Patrick Mahomes; the Chiefs Are a Bona Fide Juggernaut

Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt (27) vaults over Cincinnati Bengals safety Jessie Bates (30) during the first half of an NFL football game in Kansas City, Mo., Sunday, Oct. 21, 2018. (AP Photo/Reed Hoffmann)

Reed Hoffmann/Associated Press

Patrick Mahomes’ star continues to shine so bright others are being lost in the glare. The Kansas City Chiefs are far more than their trendsetting quarterback, though.

Yes, Mahomes is spectacular, and his skill set elevates the play of those around him, but the Chiefs roster is littered with standouts at every level deserving of far more attention. 

Tyreek Hill and Travis Kelce are exceptional talents and two of the best at their respective positions. Hill may be the NFL‘s fastest man and is nearly uncoverable. Kelce, meanwhile, can make a strong argument he surpassed the New England Patriots’ Rob Gronkowski as TE1. 

Kansas City didn’t just emerge now that an elite quarterback fell into place. Head coach Andy Reid held a 53-27 record with four playoff berths during the previous five seasons. This can’t be done without some semblance of talent. Although, the roster continued to evolve since he became the head coach in 2013. 

Sunday’s 45-10 throttling of the Cincinnati Bengals at Arrowhead Stadium highlighted others who are critical components to the team’s 6-1 start, starting with the running back who lines up or next to Mahomes. 

Kareem Hunt

Reed Hoffmann/Associated Press

Kareem Hunt best personifies the old Rodney Dangerfield adage, “I get no respect.” 

How many running backs could lead the NFL in rushing one year and become an afterthought the next? But that’s exactly what’s happened to Hunt. It’s become cool to say he’s overrated and a product of the system. 

Nothing could be further from the truth. 

Hunt is far from a typical back without any defining quality. One carry Sunday night encapsulated everything the second-year veteran is capable of doing: 

NFL @NFL

Oh my goodness, @Kareemhunt7!

📺: @snfonnbc #ChiefsKingdom https://t.co/eYJtoWRplC

The running back showed patience behind his blockers, escapability to avoid a tackle, enough athleticism to hurdle a defender, the balance to stick the landing and leg drive and power to finish the run with authority. 

“I haven’t seen that one before,” Reid said, per ESPN.com’s Adam Teicher. “He elevated pretty good.” 

An individual doesn’t run for 1,327 yards by accident, as Hunt did last season. He’s on pace to run for more than 1,200 this season while becoming an even bigger part in the team’s passing game. With four receiving touchdowns, including two against the Bengals, Hunt has already eclipsed last year’s total. 

Checking down doesn’t have to be considered a surrender. Hunt creates chunk plays as an outlet target, as he did during his second scoring play: 

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Mahomes and Hunt are a dangerous combo 👀

(via @thecheckdown)
https://t.co/bGZ1DJXxRb

The 216-pound back can slam it between the tackles when needed as well. That’s exactly how he scored his third touchdown. 

All in all, Hunt finished the night with 141 total yards while serving as the Chief’s bell cow. He does benefit to a degree from above-average line play. 

Mitchell Schwartz

Don Wright/Associated Press

Mitchell Schwartz is the game’s best right tackle. No one is more consistent on the strong side. Schwartz doesn’t miss any snaps and shuts down opposing pass-rushers. 

“I’m a fan of the game, and I know great players,” said Denver Broncos outside linebacker Von Miller, who leads the NFL with 7.5 sacks, per the Kansas City Star‘s Lynn Worthy. “Mitch is a great player. It’s funny how you get three [second-team] All-Pros but no Pro Bowls. That’s the weirdest (crap) ever. He’s a great player. I’ve got a lot of respect for him.”

Schwartz became the NFL’s iron man upon Joe Thomas’ retirement. His four seasons opposite the future Hall of Fame left tackle in Cleveland must have taught him plenty. Schwartz will never be mistaken for the game’s most athletic blocker. His attention to detail, understanding of defenses, technique and consistency are unrivaled. 

All of those qualities have been vital to Kansas City’s offense as of late. The unit’s regular starters at center and right guard—Mitch Morse and Laurent Duvernay-Tardif—weren’t in the lineup Sunday. Morse is in the concussion protocol, while Duvernay-Tardif is on injured reserve after suffering a fractured fibula. 

Line upheaval can ruin any good offense. Schwartz provides the Chiefs with the veteran presence to stabilize the unit even though two new starters are in place. 

The defensive line isn’t nearly as dependable, but the group includes a difference-maker opposing offenses must account for on a down-by-down basis. 

Chris Jones

Reed Hoffmann/Associated Press

Questions about consistency plagued Chris Jones during the 2016 predraft process and pushed the defensive lineman down boards, allowing the Chiefs to select him with the 37th overall pick. 

Jones’ natural ability was never in question. Although, the Chiefs coaching staff had to coax the best out of him. It’s done so, and Jones has developed into a wrecking ball. 

At 6’6″ and 310 pounds, Jones has the size, length and strength most blockers can’t handle. The third-year lineman serves as the focal point for the entire defense, both on and off the field. 

“The thing that makes Chris something special really has nothing to do with the tangible things that you can measure on a football field,” Jones’ high school defensive coordinator, Coty Cox, told the Kansas City Star‘s Brooke Pryor. “It’s the personality that he brings to the locker room. … He shows up swinging them big ‘ol arms and he’s got that grin on his face and, ‘Oh yeah baby, it’s football time.’ It’s every single day.”

Jones managed a sack and two tackles for loss during Sunday’s contest. 

The Chiefs defense remains a cause for concern. After all, Bob Sutton’s side of the ball came into this weekend’s play ranked 32nd overall. The Bengals offense managed a meager 239 yards, though. 

Harrison Butker

Ed Zurga/Associated Press

Special teams, meanwhile, is a team strength, especially behind the leg of kicker Harrison Butker. The second-year specialist finally missed a field goal in the first quarter, albeit a 53-yarder. He’s still 12-of-13 this season, and he’s converted all 32 extra-point attempts. 

Butker is one of seven kickers (minimum of four field-goal attempts) with a 90 percent field-goal conversion rate and no missed extra points. 

Poor special teams play, especially from kickers, has been counted among the NFL’s biggest problems this season. Multiple organizations have cycled through multiple kicking options. A field goal and extra point are no longer considered automatic plays. Butker is pretty close to automatic—which makes the Chiefs superior in another phase of the game. 

More to Come

Eric Berry and Justin Houston didn’t play against the Bengals. According to CBS Sports’ Jason La Canfora, the Chiefs are confident Berry will play again this season as he recovers from a ruptured Achilles tendon. Houston is nursing an injured hamstring. 

Both are aging vets who may not be the same players they once were. However, they’d make the Chiefs more potent overall because of their experience and ability to provide depth.

Until that happens, Kansas City can continue to lean on Mahomes’ star power and his outstanding surrounding cast. The quarterback may get most of the credit during an MVP-caliber campaign, but the Chiefs are being led by a total team effort. 

Brent Sobleski covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter: @brentsobleski.

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Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs Destroy Andy Dalton, Bengals as Kareem Hunt Scores 3 TDs

Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt (27) celebrates a touchdown with offensive lineman Andrew Wylie (77) during the first half of an NFL football game against the Cincinnati Bengals in Kansas City, Mo., Sunday, Oct. 21, 2018. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)

Ed Zurga/Associated Press

The Kansas City Chiefs stayed red-hot offensively with a 45-10 blowout win over the Cincinnati Bengals Sunday night at Arrowhead Stadium.

Patrick Mahomes had 358 passing yards and four touchdowns, while Kareem Hunt scored three times as the Chiefs recorded at least 38 points for the fifth time in seven games. The effort helped the team bounce back from its first loss of the year in Week 6 to move to 6-1 on the season.

Andy Dalton had just 148 passing yards in the Bengals’ second straight loss after a 4-1 start to the year.

Kareem Hunt Is NFL‘s Most Underrated Superstar

Mahomes has been one of the biggest stories of the NFL season and is the face of the Chiefs’ success so far in 2018. However, Hunt showed against the Bengals that he should not be overlooked as a major factor in this attack.

Mahomes had his numbers, but Hunt was the best player on the field Sunday.

The running back had a pair of receiving touchdowns that required impressive work after the catch:

NFL @NFL

“Brilliant Quarterback Play!”

@PatrickMahomes5 finds @kareemhunt7.
That’s a @chiefs TOUCHDOWN.

📺: @snfonnbc #ChiefsKingdom https://t.co/ddyOy0SWHq

NFL @NFL

.@PatrickMahomes5’s 2nd TD pass of the night.
@Kareemhunt7’s 2nd TD CATCH on the night.

The @Chiefs!

📺: @snfonnbc #ChiefsKingdom https://t.co/AchjYU780q

Meanwhile, his best run of the day didn’t even score a touchdown but required a high degree of difficulty:

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

KAREEM HUNT. GOODNESS. 😱

(via @NFL)
https://t.co/qGMDr9MNBd

You know the play was especially good when it got the attention of arguably the best running back in history:

Barry Sanders @BarrySanders

Nice hurdle by @Kareemhunt7

The Chiefs have enough weapons that Hunt sometimes gets overlooked, but he had 185 yards from scrimmage against the Patriots last week and followed it up with 86 rushing yards and 55 receiving yards against the Bengals.

More importantly, he did a lot of the work himself with broken tackles and strong finishes on each play, rather than relying on schemes and blocking.

Hunt led the NFL in rushing last season and continues to improve as an overall player. He is not just a cog in the machine but instead a bona fide superstar who is not getting enough respect. You put him in any situation, and he would succeed, though he will probably be fine benefitting from an elite offense at the moment.

Improved Chiefs Defense Provides Real Hope for Contention

The Kansas City offense has masked the terrible defense at the start of the season, at least until the 43-40 loss to the Patriots last week. The strategy of simply outscoring opponents won’t work against elite competition, especially in the playoffs.

On the plus side, the defense took a major step forward this week while keeping the Bengals offense in check.

Dee Ford and Chris Jones brought pressure on Dalton, forcing him to usually look at his first read or nothing. The quarterback finished 15-of-29 for 148 yards and a 63.6 quarterback rating. The Bengals offense only had 188 yards of offense with the starters on the field.

The group then got itself on the scoreboard with a Ron Parker interception returned for a touchdown:

NFL @NFL

🚨 PICK-6 ALERT! 🚨

📺: @SNFONNBC #ChiefsKingdom https://t.co/fVAWJf8Swt

Kansas City entered the week ranked dead last in the NFL with 468.2 yards allowed per game, which wasn’t a good sign against a Bengals offense that was sixth in the league in scoring. However, the unit was aggressive throughout the night and continued to make plays on the ball.

If Justin Houston and Eric Berry return to the field and play to their ability, this defense could go from worst in the league to respectable. This is enough to transform the Chiefs from a fun story into legitimate Super Bowl contenders.

Bengals Defense, Not Andy Dalton, Will Be Team’s Downfall

There is no denying Dalton was terrible against the Chiefs. He was going against a bad defense and couldn’t move the ball with any consistency, while the biggest chunks of yardage were mostly thanks to A.J. Green.

However, the quarterback and the offense have done their jobs, for the most part, this season. It has been the defense that has been holding the squad back, and that was apparent throughout the night against the Chiefs.

The problems were clear by halftime Sunday:

Katherine Terrell @Kat_Terrell

Bengals trail the Chiefs 24-7 after one half, and it feels like even more. The Bengals look confuse on defense and can’t match the Chiefs’ speed. Being down two defensive starters doesn’t help. The Bengals have missed tackles all night and their defense… https://t.co/91pSfCr2ja

Jay Morrison @JayMorrisonATH

The #Bengals are a clown show right now.

Another 21 points in the second half showed things did not improve.

While the Chiefs are a difficult team for anyone to stop, the Bengals were making things harder on themselves by consistently missing tackles and always being in the wrong position. Players were wide open down the field, and the squad had no answers for Mahomes’ ability to spread it around.

Though head coach Marvin Lewis and defensive coordinator Teryl Austin deserve a large portion of the blame, it also is up to the players to simply make plays on the ball, which they didn’t do Sunday.

A healthy Nick Vigil and Darqueze Dennard would have helped a little, but this unit wasn’t going to slow down the Chiefs regardless of who was in the lineup.

Cincinnati is now allowing 29 points per game in seven weeks with three opponents topping 30 points, which shows this wasn’t a one-week fluke. This group looks too old and too slow to match up with the better teams in the NFL, and that will continue to be a problem all year long.

Dalton is an easy target, but the defense will cost this team more wins than the quarterback.

What’s Next?

Things will get easier for the Bengals in Week 8 thanks to a matchup with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Chiefs will have an important divisional battle at home against the Denver Broncos.

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