Kyrie Irving Tells Boston Crowd He Plans to Sign New Contract with Celtics

CHAPEL HILL, NC - SEPTEMBER 28: Kyrie Irving #11 of the Boston Celtics reacts after missing a three-point shot as time expired in the first quarter of their preseason game against the Charlotte Hornets at Dean Smith Center on September 28, 2018 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. The Hornets won 104-97. (Photo by Lance King/Getty Images)

Lance King/Getty Images

Boston Celtics point guard Kyrie Irving pre-emptively squashed the drama that was sure to accompany his impending free agency. 

According to Turner Sports’ Kristen Ledlow, Irving told fans in attendance during Thursday night’s tip-off event at TD Garden that he plans to be in Boston for the long haul. 

“I’m planning on re-signing here next year,” he said. 

Boston Celtics @celtics

“If you guys will have me back, I plan on re-signing here.” – @KyrieIrving https://t.co/0wDLzuv5WL

Citing sources, The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported Irving “has also communicated with Boston ownership over past several weeks and verbally committed plans to stay long-term.”

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available. 

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Ford would have ruled out much-scrutinized Kavanaugh calendar date, her team says


Christine Blasey Ford and her lawyers

Christine Blasey Ford (center) confirms with and her attorneys Debra S. Katz (left)) and Michael R Bromwich, as she testifies on Capitol Hill on Sept. 27. | Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

Christine Blasey Ford would have ruled out a key date that both Republicans and Democrats have examined in evaluating her sexual assault claim against Brett Kavanaugh, had the FBI contacted her for its inquiry, according to a member of her team.

The July 1, 1982 entry has come under heightened scrutiny as the Senate considers Ford’s allegation against Kavanaugh, based largely on a gathering on that date that the judge listed in his calendars. For its time-limited inquiry into the claims against Kavanaugh, the FBI has reportedly interviewed attendees of what the judge described in 1982 as a gathering on that night with friend Mark Judge — whom Ford has said was in the room when she was attacked — and another friend whom Ford has said she “went out with” in high school.

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Under questioning from GOP outside attorney Rachel Mitchell last week, Kavanaugh said that any event like the one at which Ford said she was assaulted would appear on his calendar “because I documented everything of those kinds of events, even small get-togethers.” Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) later seized on the July 1 entry in Kavanaugh’s calendar as potentially “powerful corroborating evidence.”

But a member of Ford’s team said the California-based professor — who was not interviewed by the FBI for its inquiry — “would have told them that she never considered July 1 as a possible date, because of some of the people listed on his calendar who she knew well and would have remembered.”

“She would have also told the FBI that it was just a regular summer night for everyone else who was there,” the member of Ford’s team added. “There would have been no reason for them to remember it.”

It’s unclear how much the FBI scrutinized July 1, 1982, during its interviews with what senators said Thursday were nine individuals connected to sexual misconduct allegations against Kavanaugh from Ford and Deborah Ramirez, a college classmate who alleges he exposed himself to her at a party.

But Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) told reporters Thursday that the bureau’s inquiry was “pretty specific. They really tried to find out as much as they could, matching up dates and places — kind of what had been alleged.”

Burgess Everett contributed to this report.

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Kendrick Lamar Is At His Breeziest On Anderson .Paak’s ‘Tints’



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It’s been two years since Anderson .Paak dropped his musical burst of sunshine Malibu, and it appears his full-length followup, Oxnard (named after another California city), is on the horizon. .Paak’s been hinting at a team-up with fellow L.A. great Kendrick Lamar, and on Thursday (October 4), that collab emerged with “Tints,” an easy, breezy jam about cruising around SoCal with tinted windows. Truly, nothing is more on brand for .Paak.

Over a funk-infused beat, .Paak breezily muses, “I been feelin’ kinda cooped up, cooped up / I’m tryna get some fresh air.” K. Dot, meanwhile, swoops in with an especially effortless verse that’s anything but humble: “Bitch, I’m Kendrick Lamar, respect me from afar / I was made in his image, you call me a god.”

Following the song’s premiere on Zane Lowe’s Beats 1 show, .Paak said of Lamar, “He’s the most selfless, amazing, focused young gentleman I’ve ever met. Some people you can trust to just send it and they gonna send it back and it’s gonna be flames. I just knew that would be the case with him.”

“Tints” marks the pair’s first official team-up on a track, though they were both featured on Dr. Dre’s Compton, and .Paak was one of the artists Kendrick tapped for his star-studded Black Panther: The Album. Hopefully this isn’t the last time we’ll hear the two SoCal kings together.

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Brazil elections 2018: What you need to know

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – About 147 million Brazilians will head to polls on Sunday in highly polarised presidential and congressional elections. 

At stake, is the presidency and more than 1,650 national and state level positions.

The vote takes place against a backdrop of widespread dissatisfaction prompted by a stuttering economy, worsening violent crime rates and several recent high-profile corruption scandals.

Here’s what you need to know about Sunday’s election:

Why does the vote matter?

Brazil, Latin America’s most populous country and largest economy, is a regional powerhouse.

Home to about 210 million people, Brazil forms part of the five-member “BRICS” group of major emerging economies alongside Russia, India, China and South Africa.

But several recent domestic setbacks have begun to erode the country’s standing on the world stage, according to Oliver Stuenkel, a professor of international relations at the Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV).

Brazil at this point, and over the last few years, has lost its voice on international issues,” Stuenkel said.

“It is no longer able to project itself as a model … its legitimacy is lower today than four years ago [at the last election],” he added.

This year’s vote arrives at a critical juncture for Brazil’s future prospects as it battles to confront several complex and threatening challenges that have increased unrest and widened polarisation among the country’s citizens. 

What are the key issues?

At the top of voters minds are Brazil’s economic, political and social crises.

From 2000-2012 Brazil seized on a global commodities boom to become one of the fastest growing major economies in the world. A more than two-year long deep recession, which began in mid-2014, has since rocked the country and stagnated growth.

Though technically out of the recession since last year, the economy is still struggling to recover and unemployment stands at above 12 percent, according to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics.

The fiscal downturn has coincided with numerous high-level corruption scandals since 2014 as part of the Lava Jato, or Car Wash, anti-graft probe and other interlocking investigations.

Widely popular former president Luiz Inacio ‘Lula’ da Silva was among more than 150 Brazilian business leaders, corporations and politicians convicted on the back of the investigations. He is now serving 12 years in jail and was barred from running in this election. Lula has consistently denied the charges, say they are  politically motivated.

The scandals involving the former president and others have decimated public faith in the country’s political class and democratic institutions.

Just 17 percent of Brazilians have confidence in the national government, according to US-based consultancy Gallup, down from 51 percent a decade ago.

Violent crime, meanwhile, has surged in the last few years. In 2017, a record 63,880 homicides took place in Brazil, up 2.9 percent from 2016.

In the grip of a worsening public security crisis, Brazil is now home to seven of the world’s 20 most violent cities.

The combination of these factors has placed Brazil “on the front lines of the global recession in democracies”, Brian Winter, vice president of policy at the Americas Society and Council of the Americas and editor-in-chief of Americas Quarterly, told Al Jazeera.

The issues present in Brazil are seen in a lot of places; disenchantment with the establishment, problems generating new employment, existential doubts over trade and rising violence,” Winter said.

“But in many of those cases they are just worse in Brazil than they have been in a lot of other places,” he added.

Who is being elected?

Voters will decide on the country 38th president and all 27 of Brazil’s state governorships.

Also up for grabs are most of the seats in Congress – including two-thirds of the 81-member upper-house Senate and all 513 places in the lower-house Chamber of Deputies – and 1,059 positions within state legislatures.

Who are the top presidential contenders?

Far-right frontrunner and controversial firebrand Jair Bolsonaro of the Social Liberal Party has led opinion polls in the run-up to the vote, and is projected to win up to 32 percent of the vote, according to Datafolha polling institute.

A Rio de Janeiro congressman since 1991, Bolsonaro has styled himself as a political outsider untarnished by corruption and pledged to end Brazil’s security problems by militarising the police and loosening gun laws.

His numerous discriminatory comments on race, gender and sexual orientation and several highly controversial remarks about the country’s former military dictatorship – in power from 1964-85 – have angered and alarmed tens of millions of Brazilians.

On Saturday, hundreds of thousands of Brazilians turned out in cities nationwide to protest his candidacy as part of a women-led #EleNao (#NotHim) movement. The next day, thousands of Bolsonaro’s supporters rallied throughout Brazil in response.

Last month, Bolsonaro was stabbed while out canvassing support in the city of Juiz de Fora, in southeastern Minais Gerais state, and has been unable to return to the campaign trail since.

People holding national flags gather in front of the condominium where leading presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro resides to show their support, in Rio de Janeiro [Leo Correa/AP Photo]

Fernando Haddad, Bolsonaro’s closest opponent and the leftist Workers’ Party (PT) replacement candidate for Lula, is trailing the former army captain in second place with about 21 percent of support. 

Haddad, a former mayor of Sao Paulo and minister of education under Lula, has promised to “make Brazil happy again” and restore the economy to its former state of health under Lula’s presidency from 2003-2010.

He is facing the difficult balancing act of translating Lula’s widespread popularity among Brazil’s working class into votes for himself while also appealing to parts of the electorate with whom the former president and the wider PT are deeply unpopular.

Hostility towards the PT among some is high as a result of corruption scandals and the economic downturn which coincided with Dilma Rousseff’s, Lula’s successor, time in office from 2011 until her impeachment and removal from the presidency in August 2016.

Neither Bolsonaro or Haddad appear likely to secure the absolute majority of support required to win office in the first round vote, on October 7, and are widely tipped to contest a second round head-to-head vote on October 28 instead.

Polling suggests Ciro Gomes, Geraldo Alckmin and Marina Silva – a trio of centrists who have all run for the presidency at least once before – will not catch up with the two frontrunners.

In terms of the final two candidates it has actually been quite predictable,” Winter said.

Where it does become unpredictable is in this runoff, if it does confirm that we are looking at Bolsonaro versus Haddad then that’s about as close to a toss up as you get,” he added.

Haddad and Bolsonaro both have high rejection rates, however, hovering above 40 percent.

That could pose problems for Brazil post-election if, as appears likely to be the case, either of the pair are elected to the country’s highest office, according to Winter.

“If it’s one of these two candidates [Haddad or Bolsonaro] as president, I think they are going to face extremely difficult challenges on the economic and social front and possible questions about legitimacy,” Winter said.

“I think Brazil could come out of the election with a very divided society that may not be focused on the right things, and maybe focused more on division and this war between competing cults of personality than the very real economic, social and security challenges,” he added.

How does voting work?

More than 147 million people are eligible to vote. Participation is compulsory for “literate” Brazilians aged 18-70.

Participants will make their choices via an electronic voting system, using a single, number-based method. First, they will vote on state legislators, then congressional positions, state governors and, finally, the presidency.

The presidency, state governors and senators are decided on by a majority voting system.

Seats in the Chamber of Deputies and state legislatures, meanwhile, are determined using a proportional system.

Although most results will be decided on October 7, there may be a series of second round runoff ballots held on October 28.

Presidential and state governor candidates, unlike senators, require an absolute majority vote to be elected.

If no such result is returned on October 7, the best two performers from the first round go head-to-head in a second poll two weeks later.

At every level of government, those elected face a huge challenge to overturn the current malaise weighing on Brazil, according to Stuenkel.

“The broad sense of crises is clearly present, there is a notion that things are difficult … there is a sense of crises and that there is a complexity to the crises,” he said.

“Brazil is in a very difficult situation.”

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NLDS Live: Rockies vs. Brewers

  1. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  2. Brewers Fans Ready for Playoff Baseball

    via Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

  3. Brewers Go with Traditional Non-Traditional Starter

    via Fangraphs

  4. The Brewers Outfield Combating Coors

    via Fangraphs

  5. 22 Reasons Yelich Is Better Than Your Favorite Player

    via SBNation.com

  6. FOX Sports: MLB @MLBONFOX

  7. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  8. Bill Shaikin @BillShaikin

  9. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  10. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  11. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  12. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  13. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  14. Purple Row @PurpleRow

  15. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  16. Milwaukee Brewers @Brewers

  17. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  18. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  19. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  20. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  21. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  22. ESPN Stats & Info @ESPNStatsInfo

  23. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  24. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  25. Bill Shaikin @BillShaikin

  26. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  27. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  28. Purple Row @PurpleRow

  29. Tom @Haudricourt

  30. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  31. Reviewing the Brew @ReviewngTheBrew

  32. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  33. Tom @Haudricourt

  34. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  35. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  36. Cespedes Family BBQ @CespedesBBQ

  37. BSN Rockies @BSNRockies

  38. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  39. ESPN Stats & Info @ESPNStatsInfo

  40. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  41. Tom @Haudricourt

  42. Rox Pile @RoxPileFS

  43. BSN Rockies @BSNRockies

  44. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  45. FOX Sports Wisconsin @fswisconsin

  46. FOX Sports: MLB @MLBONFOX

  47. Baseball Reference @baseball_ref

  48. BSN Rockies @BSNRockies

  49. Tom @Haudricourt

  50. Milwaukee Brewers @Brewers

  51. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  52. Colorado Rockies @Rockies

  53. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  54. Purple DIVISION SERIES Podcast @purpledinocast

  55. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  56. Cespedes Family BBQ @CespedesBBQ

  57. Reviewing the Brew @ReviewngTheBrew

  58. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  59. Sophia Minnaert @SophiaMinnaert

  60. FanGraphs Baseball @fangraphs

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NLDS Live: Rockies vs. Brewers

  1. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  2. Brewers Fans Ready for Playoff Baseball

    via Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

  3. Brewers Go with Traditional Non-Traditional Starter

    via Fangraphs

  4. The Brewers Outfield Combating Coors

    via Fangraphs

  5. 22 Reasons Yelich Is Better Than Your Favorite Player

    via SBNation.com

  6. FOX Sports: MLB @MLBONFOX

  7. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  8. Bill Shaikin @BillShaikin

  9. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  10. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  11. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  12. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  13. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  14. Purple Row @PurpleRow

  15. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  16. Milwaukee Brewers @Brewers

  17. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  18. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  19. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  20. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  21. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  22. ESPN Stats & Info @ESPNStatsInfo

  23. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  24. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  25. Bill Shaikin @BillShaikin

  26. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  27. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  28. Purple Row @PurpleRow

  29. Tom @Haudricourt

  30. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  31. Reviewing the Brew @ReviewngTheBrew

  32. Todd Rosiak @Todd_Rosiak

  33. Tom @Haudricourt

  34. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  35. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  36. Cespedes Family BBQ @CespedesBBQ

  37. BSN Rockies @BSNRockies

  38. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  39. ESPN Stats & Info @ESPNStatsInfo

  40. Thomas Harding @harding_at_mlb

  41. Tom @Haudricourt

  42. Rox Pile @RoxPileFS

  43. BSN Rockies @BSNRockies

  44. Patrick Saunders @psaundersdp

  45. FOX Sports Wisconsin @fswisconsin

  46. FOX Sports: MLB @MLBONFOX

  47. Baseball Reference @baseball_ref

  48. BSN Rockies @BSNRockies

  49. Tom @Haudricourt

  50. Milwaukee Brewers @Brewers

  51. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  52. Colorado Rockies @Rockies

  53. Cream City Central @CreamCityCtral

  54. Purple DIVISION SERIES Podcast @purpledinocast

  55. Jake Shapiro @Shapalicious

  56. Cespedes Family BBQ @CespedesBBQ

  57. Reviewing the Brew @ReviewngTheBrew

  58. Adam McCalvy @AdamMcCalvy

  59. Sophia Minnaert @SophiaMinnaert

  60. FanGraphs Baseball @fangraphs

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Halsey’s ‘Without Me’ Is Her Most Personal Song To Date: ‘I Cried The Whole Time’



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Halsey is back with her first new song not as Halsey. Technically, “Without Me,” is still released under that moniker, but — as she explained in an interview with Zane Lowe on Thursday (October 4) — it’s the first time she’s written a song using her real name, Ashley Frangipane.

“It’s just me. No wig, no colorful hair, no character, and it’s about my life and about my relationship that the world has watched so closely and so vehemently in the past year and a half,” Halsey explained, emphasizing that “Without Me” is a standalone track that’s not part of some grand Shakespearean concept album á la last year’s Hopeless Fountain Kingdom.

The relationship in question is Halsey’s romance with G-Eazy, which has been plagued by his rumored cheating and their brief split over the summer. The couple has since gotten back together, but “Without Me” seems to reflect on their torturous time apart. “Tell me how’s it feel sittin’ up there / Feeling so high but too far away to hold me,” she sings. “You know I’m the one who put you up there / Name in the sky / Does it ever get lonely? / Thinking you could live without me.”

For dramatic effect, the song even nods to Justin Timberlake’s spiteful 2002 breakup hit “Cry Me a River” with the lyrics, “You don’t have to say just what you did / I already know / I had to go and find out from them.”

Recording the track, Halsey admitted, was an emotional process. “I cried the whole time I recorded it,” she tweeted. “But now I feel proud. And empowered.”

See Halsey further discuss “Without Me” in the Beats 1 interview below.

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Juventus, Nike Issue Statements on Cristiano Ronaldo Rape Allegation

Juventus forward Cristiano Ronaldo and his partner Georgina sit in the stands prior to the Champions League, group H soccer match between Juventus and Young Boys, at the Allianz stadium in Turin, Italy, Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)

Luca Bruno/Associated Press

Nike is reportedly “deeply concerned” with rape allegations against Juventus and Portugal soccer player Cristiano Ronaldo, although the Serie A club publicly backed their player.

Rob Harris of the Associated Press reported Nike called the allegations “disturbing,” but Juventus released a statement on Twitter backing his “great professionalism and dedication” and pointing out these developments “do not change this opinion.”

JuventusFC @juventusfcen

.@Cristiano Ronaldo has shown in recent months his great professionalism and dedication, which is appreciated by everyone at Juventus. 1/1

JuventusFC @juventusfcen

The events allegedly dating back to almost 10 years ago do not change this opinion, which is shared by anyone who has come into contact with this great champion. 2/2

This comes after Barry Hatton of the Associated Press reported Ronaldo was left off Portugal’s national soccer team for upcoming matches after Kathryn Mayorga’s 2009 rape allegations resurfaced.

Nike isn’t the only sponsor to respond to the rape allegations, as Harris noted EA Sports said, “We have seen the concerning report that details allegations against Cristiano Ronaldo. We are closely monitoring the situation, as we expect cover athletes and ambassadors to conduct themselves in a manner that is consistent with EA’s values.”

According to Jimmy Golen of the AP, the Las Vegas Police confirmed they reopened the sexual assault case from 2009 that Mayorga brought against Ronaldo on the same day of the alleged attack.

Emanuella Grinberg, Shawn Nottingham and Eliott C. McLaughlin of CNN reported on the case, noting the lawsuit says Ronaldo apologized and said he “was usually a gentleman” after the alleged rape. Mayorga says she received $375,000 for her silence.

However, Ken Ritter of the AP wrote Mayorga’s lawyers said she was “diagnosed with post-traumatic stress and depression, conditions they argue would have made her legally incompetent to reach a non-disclosure agreement.”

Ronaldo denied the allegations and called rape “an abominable crime” in a Twitter response.

Harris noted Ronaldo has been under contract with Nike since 2003.

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The EU-Sisi deal shows Egyptian lives don’t matter

Eight years ago, a photo of the brutalised body of Khaled Said, a young man from the Egyptian port city of Alexandria, went viral on social media. Said had been beaten to death by local police, who alleged that he had died from asphyxiation, after stuffing a bag of hashish down his own throat.

Public anger over repressions, police brutality and impunity under the regime of President Hosni Mubarak had been simmering for years and with Said’s murder, it boiled over. Unprecedented protests took place in Alexandria and Cairo that summer under the slogan “We are all Khaled Said”.

Six months later, in January 2011, Said would become one of the symbols of the Egyptian uprising, as people took to the streets, calling for freedom and dignity and the downfall of the regime. After Mubarak was toppled, graffiti artists painted Said’s face on buildings in downtown Cairo.

Today, these graffiti are gone, whitewashed by the regime of Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who has unleashed an unprecedented level of violence and repression onto the people of Egypt which many see as “worse than Mubarak’s“.

Report after report by human rights organisations have detailed massacres, mass arrests, torture in detention, forced disappearances and death sentences in Egypt, calling on the rest of the world to take action.

The European Union, however, has chosen to ignore these pleas and continue cooperation with the Sisi regime. Not even the forced disappearance, torture and brutal murder of one of its citizens, Italian student Giulio Regeni, in 2016 changed this stance; his mother, Paola Regeni, famously said: “they killed him like an Egyptian.”

After an initial rebuke of the Egyptian authorities, who are seen as being responsible for the murder, Italy quietly returned its ambassador to Cairo last year and proceeded to conclude an energy deal with Egypt.

Today the racist far-right Italian government is at the forefront of EU efforts to strike deals with North African countries to prevent desperate people fleeing violence, abject poverty and war, from reaching European shores. One of these states is Sisi’s Egypt.

In mid-September it emerged that the EU is negotiating a deal with the Egyptian dictator to have his security forces up their policing of coastal waters and divert vessels carrying refugees to Egypt. In return, the Egyptian regime will receive financial support and investment and high-profile visits from European leaders.

If such a deal is concluded, this would be a bright and shiny proof that for the EU, Egyptian lives don’t matter.

An Egyptian boy passes by a mural of Khaled Said’s post-mortem photo in downtown Cairo on November 29, 2012 [Reuters/Amr Abdallah Dalsh]

Sisi’s horrendous track-record

Since Sisi took over in a bloody coup in the summer of 2013, his human rights record has gone from bad to worse. Tens of thousands have been imprisoned under various repressive laws – from activists and journalists to ordinary people.

Human Rights Watch has declared that there is a “torture epidemic” in Egypt which may constitute a crime against humanity. Amnesty International has documented the forcible disappearance of hundreds of Egyptians. The world has balked at the number of court cases in which death sentences have been handed down to dozens of civilians.

And beyond the every-day repression Egypt’s general population is facing, Sisi’s regime has not spared refugees either. Since 2013, human rights defenders have called on the Egyptian authorities to stop arbitrarily arresting and deporting Syrian and Palestinian refugees. Syrians deported to Damascus have been at a high risk of facing detention and torture by the Syrian regime.

The Egyptian police has also been detaining and harassing refugees and asylum seekers from Sudan and the Horn of Africa, with NGOs reporting that hundreds were detained for seeking to leave Egypt “illegally”. In 2015, Egyptian border police shot and killed 15 Sudanese migrants and wounded another eight at the Egyptian-Israeli border.

If Egypt starts diverting intercepted boats to its shores and intensifies crackdown on refugees and migrants who make it through its borders, its fundamentally flawed judiciary and appallingly tough conditions in Egypt’s immensely overcrowded prisons strongly suggest that this will result an abundance of human rights abuses.

Given its overloaded health care system and inadequate social provision, it is also highly doubtful that it would be able to provide for the basic needs of these people. Severe restrictions placed on the operations of over 47 000 NGOs through a draconian billalso mean that the non-profit sector will not be able to help either.

The personal belongings of murdered Italian student Giulio Regeni which, the Egyptian interior ministry alleged, were uncovered after it killed members of a criminal gang suspected of being linked to his killing. The Italian government rejected the claim [AP]

Sisi’s paid-for legitimacy, EU betrayal

It is in the context of these past and future human rights abuses that the EU’s decision to work with Sisi must be strongly condemned. Any deal struck with the Egyptian president will diminish the diplomatic legitimacy and moral authority of the EU in Egypt and beyond.

Any arrangement whatsoever with Sisi will justify Italian interior minister Matteo Salvini’s blatantly racist, violent and hostile policies towards migrants and the much-maligned NGOs trying to help them.

This intended partnership is the unfortunate and painful betrayal of liberal democracy and every individual unfairly imprisoned, tortured, forcibly disappeared and killed by Egyptian security forces since 2013.

And all the wonderfully crafted EU statements lambasting the undemocratic actions of authoritarian governments in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon will ring shamefully hollow once questioned through the dark, blood-filled prism of regressive diplomatic solidarity with Sisi.

No doubt the Egyptian president will use his administration’s partnership with the EU as diplomatic cover for further brutal clampdowns on human rights campaigners, NGOs and political rivals, all to bolster his wafer-thin legitimacy. No doubt Sisi’s propaganda machinery will go into overdrive publicising his EU engagements as solid proof of his supposedly strong, progressive and indispensable leadership on the world stage.

No doubt ordinary Egyptians and desperate migrants from the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa and the Sahel region, will come to understand and experience first-hand, how the EU has no genuine desire to help foster stability, security and prosperity, democracy, fundamental freedoms and the rule of law in Egypt.

And no doubt, after all is said and done, many will soon come to realise the hard way how the EU does not promote and practice the gospel of democracy it preaches and cares little if at all about Arab and African lives. 

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance. 

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Preps Star Josh Green Is Ready to Commit

When Josh Green was 13, he boarded a jumbo jet at Sydney Airport and took off toward America. His parents and his three siblings filled the seats around him, but he didn’t say much. He didn’t watch any movies. He barely even slept. Instead, he passed the 14-hour flight to Los Angeles by imagining everything that would happen in the next few years of his life.

He started his basketball journey in this country with nothing but the fundamentals he brought from home in Australia. But as he begins his senior season at IMG Academy in Florida, Green has become the kind of player college coaches and NBA scouts covet. A crafty wing with a capable jump shot and a stunt-car driver’s ability to weave through traffic, Green is a consensus top-10 player in the class of 2019 and a likely NBA lottery pick in 2020. Now the only goal that remains from that fateful flight five years ago is to make his D-I debut.

“I’ve decided,” Green tells B/R, “I’m going to play for Arizona next year.”

It’s a fitting choice for Green, whose family made nearby Phoenix their home after they arrived in the U.S. five years ago.

“I look back at everything I’ve done and I’ve come through to be where I’m at, and I feel proud and it feels crazy,” he says. “I moved from one side of the world to the other side of the world. A lot of kids in Australia would love to be in the situation I’m in. I’m excited for what’s next.”


Basketball wasn’t always the plan for Green. His parents, Cahla (pronounced “Carla”) and Delmas Green, both played professional basketball in Australia, but neither wanted to push Josh into their sport. So they let him try just about everything else.

He swam and ran cross-country, and he played rugby, tennis, soccer, tag football and Australian rules football. He excelled in everything he tried—except for a brief stint in gymnastics. (“He told me he couldn’t do it,” says Cahla, “because he was too tall and his legs landed too early.”) When Josh was two, he was sitting in the stands to watch his five-year-old brother, Jay, play soccer. When Jay’s coach informed Cahla and Demas he was short a player, Josh volunteered to join. He was practically swimming in the oversized shirt, but he managed to keep the team afloat as its goalkeeper.

Though Josh Allen's parents both played basketball, they wanted Josh to have the freedom to play any sport he desired, which he did quite well in Australia.

Though Josh Allen’s parents both played basketball, they wanted Josh to have the freedom to play any sport he desired, which he did quite well in Australia.Photo courtesy of Cahla Green

By the age of 10, he’d made state teams in nine sports, including basketball. Cahla had started coaching Josh at age five, and it was clear from the start that it would be his best sport. (Delmas would later coach Josh in his first season of Australian high school, which starts in the American equivalent of seventh grade.)

It was in the fifth grade, though, that Josh had his first chance to make a New South Wales under-12 team. Cahla had given birth to his sister, Maya, days before, but that didn’t stop her from packing the family into a rented camper van and driving 14 hours into the Outback. In Broken Hill, a frontier mining town, Josh was told he was good enough for the final roster but would have to wait a year so that other, older boys could play. On the long drive home, he looked out the window at the desert and cried. When he made the team the following year, he captained it to a gold medal.

“I think it’s good for kids to face controversy or challenges,” Josh says now. “I’m probably the most competitive person I know. And I would cry when I lose. To this day I’m still very competitive, but I’ve learned to handle myself better. Whether I win or lose, I can keep my emotions in check.”

Having a talented older brother also helped. Jay, now a sophomore point guard at UNLV, never went easy on his younger brother in pickup games. When they weren’t hosting dunk contests on eight-foot rims in the driveway, more competitive matchups would often end in clenched fists or red eyes. But Jay helped clear each new basketball trail for Josh. And when he came back from a summer of AAU basketball in America in 2012, Josh knew he’d found a future for both of them.

When Delmas was offered a job in Arizona, he and Cahla weren’t sure if Josh would want to move. He was making a name for himself in basketball and in Australian rules football, where he’d become the No. 1 prospect in his age group and had already enrolled in the youth club for a pro team, the GWS Giants. But for Josh, the decision was simple. “I was like, let’s leave next week,” Josh says. “I love America. I like gear and shoes, and you can get everything so much cheaper [in the U.S]. And, of course, almost all people who play basketball in Australia want to come to America.”

Unhappy with a coaching change at his Phoenix-area high school, Green decided to move across the country, and away from his family, to play at IMG Academy in Florida

Unhappy with a coaching change at his Phoenix-area high school, Green decided to move across the country, and away from his family, to play at IMG Academy in FloridaPhoto courtesy of John Esfeller IV/IMG Academy

In Australia, he’d attended The King’s School, a private academy in Parramatta, and had to wear a shirt and tie. But in public school in Phoenix, he had no restrictions. “Having no uniform might have been the biggest adjustment,” he jokes, “but I got to start showing off my style.” Soon he had switched from the tight shorts that dominate Australian hoops to the looser American look and started his kicks collection, which now includes Guccis, Nike Air Max 97s and a couple of pairs of Yeezys.

He spent hours on social media, learning everything he could about tournaments and camps and clinics. And when he began attending them—the John Lucas Elite Invitational in Houston was his first big showcase—he would pepper the other prospects with questions about where he should go next. As a sophomore, he transferred to Hillcrest Prep, an upstart academy just outside Phoenix designed to give elite basketball players a national schedule and showcase. There, Green averaged 20.1 points per game while teamed up with future No. 1 pick Deandre Ayton.

Dissatisfied with Hillcrest after a coaching change, he and his family went to visit IMG in Florida. After touring the campus and the basketball facilities, Green texted new IMG coach Sean McAloon before he boarded his flight back to Arizona and told him he’d transfer. Green had already given up his life in Australia for hoops, and now he was deciding to move across the country from his family as well.

“I was hesitant to leave my family,” he says, “but I needed to make a sacrifice eventually. I was going to have to leave them in college. Why not do it a couple years before and be ahead of people when I get to the next level? I’ll have a big start in front of a lot of the other freshmen.”

During his 2017-18 junior season and in the offseason after, Green took flight. With an additional 10 pounds of muscle and an improved shooting stroke, the 6’6″, 200-pounder steadily rose into the top 25 of his class. After standout performances at Basketball Without Borders in Los Angeles and the Nike Hoop Summit in Portland, Oregon, he landed in the top 10 in July. In the summer with West Coast Elite on the AAU circuit, he teamed up with fellow 5-star and future Arizona commit Nico Mannion to form the most thrilling one-two punch in the grassroots game. In August, Green cut his list to six schools—Arizona, Kansas, North Carolina, Villanova, UNLV and USC—and eventually chose between the Tar Heels and Wildcats.

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Josh Green (ESPN #8 in 2019) full highlights from the UA Challenge 🎬 @josh_green6

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Green’s game blends all the best parts of his past. He still has the fundamentals instilled by his mom and dad—a clean shooting stroke, a tight handle and a selfless style of play—and has blended that with the improvisational skills he picked up playing Aussie rules football and rugby. He is at his best in transition and in the open court, where he almost always seems to find a teammate for an easy bucket or the rim for a ferocious slam.

“I don’t think I’ve coached anyone who’s better in a full-court setting in 14 years,” McAloon says. “I wouldn’t even know who to compare him to. I think he can be a three-and-D-type kid. But he can be anything. He can handle the ball and get you into your offense. He can shoot the ball and create. He has a smoothness to him in transition, but he’s vicious around the rim. I’ve mostly tried not to limit the dynamic aspects of his game. He’s not the next anybody. He’s the first Josh Green.”

Green knows the comparisons to other Australian stars, especially Ben Simmons, are inevitable. And he’s grateful that Simmons has helped guide him. But they are drastically different players. “The mixtapes call me the next Ben Simmons,” he says. “The only problem is he’s 6’11” and he’s a completely different player. The only comparison is we’re Australian and we’re playmakers. Some of the stuff he can do I can’t do, and the same thing goes the other way. The way I play—I don’t really see too many comparisons. I feel like I’m my own self. I don’t play like anyone else.”

His thrilling summer came to an unexpectedly early end when he tore his labrum in July. But he doesn’t expect to miss any of IMG’s season, and he’s eager to give Arizona fans an early look at what they’ll be able to expect from him in the 2019-20 season. Sean Miller was one of the first coaches to offer Green a spot, and he is ready to pay back that early trust in his game.

“The coaches made me their priority for almost three years,” says Green, who believes his game will adapt quickly to the Wildcats’ playbook. “The way Arizona plays really fits me, and that will show. They play great in transition. Defensively, they play a lot of man-to-man, and I take pride in not letting people score on me. My versatility in their lineup will be good. I can play 1-2-3, and on defense I can go all the way out to the 4 on offense.”

Green says that being close to family wasn’t the biggest factor in his choice, but he admits he’s looking forward to it. Jay will be a six-hour drive away at UNLV, and his younger siblings, Ky and Maya, will be just two hours from him in Phoenix. “My mom and dad are going to come out to all my games,” he says. “It’ll boost me. Seeing their faces in the crowd will be the best motivation. Everything is in my reach.”

When he flies back across the country next summer, he’ll be returning to where his journey in America began. Only this time, there will thousands of fans eager for his arrival.

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