Palestine, Golan Heights take centre stage at Arab League summit

Tunis, Tunisia – The Arab League has rejected the US’s recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the occupied Golan Heights and renewed a call for the establishment of a Palestinian state, saying peace and security in the region depended on a solution to the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  

In a final statement after Sunday’s summit in Tunisia’s capital, Arab leaders stressed their “full support for Syria’s right” over the Golan plateau, which Israel seized from Syria in the 1967 war, and expressed their determination to “continue efforts to resume” peace negotiations between Israel and Palestine.

The daylong meeting in Tunis took place against the backdrop of ongoing regional unrest and conflict – from the long-running wars in Syria and Yemen to instability in Libya, and the widespread anti-government protests in Algeria and Sudan to a major diplomatic dispute in the Gulf.

Khamis al-Jihnaoui, Tunisia’s foreign minister, who delivered the 30th summit’s final statement, called the continuing conflicts in the Arab world “unacceptable”.

“Arab reconciliation is the starting point for stability in the region,” he said.

But his statement did not make mention of the majority of conflicts plaguing the region. Instead it was Washington’s recent move over Golan Heights and the Palestine issue that took centre stage.

Jihnaoui, reiterating the “the centrality of the Palestinian cause”, said Arab leaders were committed to resolving the conflict based on the Arab Peace Initiative of 2002, which offered to recognise Israel in return for a full withdrawal from lands occupied in the 1967 war, including the Golan Heights, East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

‘End to painful era’

Speaking earlier in the day, King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia repeated his kingdom’s support for a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital, while King Abdullah of Jordan, the custodian of Jerusalem’s holy sites, promised he would continue to protect the al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

For his part, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Egypt‘s president, called for a “comprehensive peaceful solution” in order to “put an end to this painful era, which wasted our energy for seven decades”.

Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority (PA), meanwhile, blamed the US for the continued Israeli occupation.

“Israel’s continuation of its racist policy, and the act of being a state above the law, would not have been possible without the support of the American administration,” Abbas said at the summit.

The PA has rejected the US as a mediator between Israel and Palestine since US President Donald Trump recognised Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in late 2017.

But despite denouncing the US’s moves favouring Israel, there was no announcement of further action by the Arab leaders.

The summit’s focus on Palestine, analysts said, was a fig leaf for Arab leaders to deflect attention from turmoil in their countries.

Mahjoob Zweiri, the director of the Gulf Studies Center at Qatar University, described the meeting as an attempt by Arab leaders to “deny what is happening in the Arab world, such as the increase of corruption, lack of transparency, and the worsening economic situation”.

“There’s a certain attempt to bring the issue of Palestine back in an attempt to please the Arab public,” he said. “The fact is the Arab League, for years and years, has done nothing to further the Palestinian question.”

In a move that ignores the Arab Peace Initiative, Arab states such as Oman and the United Arab Emirates over the past year have, overtly and covertly, tried to normalise relations with Israel.

That is why, Zweiri said, the Arab League’s policy statement was nothing more than rhetorical posturing.

“There won’t be any translation into any policy,” he said. “It will just be declarations to try to show the Arab public they are doing something.”

Arab leaders at the 30th annual summit of the Arab League in Tunis [Fethi Belaid/ AFP]

Mouin Rabbani, co-editor of Jadaliyya, an Arab studies magazine, said the Palestine issue has been on the agenda of the Arab League from its very inception in the mid-1940s.

However, in recent years it has been demoted to “secondary or even tertiary status”, he added.

“Given that so many of today’s Arab governments are effectively beholden to foreign powers rather than their own citizens, there is now an attempt by the Trump administration to ostensibly rewrite international consensus on the resolutions of the question of Palestine – and for that matter the Arab-Israeli conflict – and using its enormous power to do so unilaterally,” Rabbani told Al Jazeera.

“Over the past year, there have been consistent reports that the Trump administration has been doing so either with the cooperation with or with the acquiescence of key Arab states,” he said, referring to the Middle East peace plan process.

The plan, which was devised by Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner, has the backing of major Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Its details have not been made public.

Given the keenness of Arab states’ to maintain good relations with the US, Rabbani said the Tunis summit was merely a “prominent platform” where leaders could deny accusations of their collaboration with Washington at the expense of the Palestinian cause.

“The Arab League has conclusively and unambiguously demonstrated itself to be an obstacle to rather than an instrument of collective Arab action and promoter of Arab rights,” Rabbani said.

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Who will be Ukraine’s next president?

It’s been a challenging five years since Ukraine‘s revolution.

Petro Poroshenko took over as leader, promising to fight corruption and stand strong after Russia annexed Crimea in 2014.

But with a struggling economy and a war against separatists in the east of the country, Poroshenko is facing a battle to hold on to the job.

He is one of 39 candidates in the first round of Sunday’s presidential election, along with former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

But the frontrunner appears to be Volodymyr Zelensky, a comedian with no experience in politics, except for playing the president in a hit TV show.

So who will Ukrainians choose?

Presenter: Divya Gopalan

Guests:

Olexiy Haran – professor of comparative politics at Kiev Mohyla Academy

Dmitry Babich – political analyst at Rossiya Segodnya news agency

Lilit Gevorgyan – Russia and eastern Europe analyst at IHS Markit

Source: Al Jazeera News

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Palestinians mourn boys killed by Israeli forces in Gaza rallies

Thousands of people in the besieged Gaza Strip have attended the funerals of the four young Palestinians killed by Israeli forces during mass protests along the perimeter fence with Israel.

Tens of thousands of Palestinians on Saturday gathered at the fence to mark the first anniversary of the Great March of Return rallies, facing off against Israeli tanks and soldiers who used live rounds, rubber bullets and tear gas on the protesters.

Tamer Abu el-Khair, 17, was shot in the chest east of Khan Younis in southern Gaza and later died at a hospital, according to the health ministry in the coastal enclave, which has been under a crippling Israeli-Egypt blockade for the past 12 years.

Two other 17-year-olds – Adham Amara and Belal al-Najjar – were also killed. A fourth Palestinian, 20-year-old Mohamed Jihad Saad, was killed in an overnight protest ahead of the main demonstration. 

Since March 30 last year, Palestinians in the Hamas-run Strip have been demanding the right to return to lands from which their families were violently expelled during the founding of Israel in 1948. Protesters in the weekly rallies are also calling for an end to the blockade.

At least 207 people were wounded on Saturday, the health ministry said.

The Gaza health ministry said el-Khair was shot in the chest east of Khan Younis in southern Gaza and had died at a hospital [Khalil Hamra/The Associated Press]

On Sunday, local media in Gaza published images of Ismail Haniya, the political chief of Hamas, walking alongside el-Khair’s relatives during the funeral.

Separately, Israeli authorities on Sunday reopened the Karam Abu Salem commercial crossing and the Erez crossing with Gaza, six days after shutting them down amid an exchange of heavy fire between Israel and Hamas.

Israel regularly seals off the two crossings, which facilitate the movement of Palestinians with hard-to-obtain Israeli permits, as well as goods and services.

The Karam Abu Salem crossing is the primary passageway that transfers necessities to Gaza’s nearly two million residents, including cooking gas, wheat and flour.

It is usually closed during official Israeli holidays and on weekends, and also facilitates in the delivery of foreign aid to Gaza.

Al Jazeera’s Mohammed Jamjoom, reporting from Gaza, said the opening of the crossings was a “clear indication” that Egyptian-led mediation efforts were on a positive track.

“There is a mood of cautious optimism in Gaza,” he said

One of the reasons behind the relative calm, Jamjoom said, is that despite flare-ups the situation at the protests on Saturday remained “far less chaotic than people had feared it might become”.

Our people will not back down’: Gaza marks protests anniversary (2:30)

Easing restrictions

Meanwhile, Nizar Ayash, the head of Gaza’s fishermen’s union, told local media that Israel would expand the fishing zone that it enforces in the waters off the Strip from six nautical miles to 15, starting April 1.

Expansions occasionally occur and usually last for only three months at a time with the objective of boosting Gaza’s economy, which is heavily reliant on the fishing sector.

Hamas-affiliated news outlets reported on Saturday that an Egyptian-brokered deal had been reached between the two sides, paving the way for the easing of these restrictions.

On Saturday, Abdullatif al-Kanoo, a spokesman for Hamas, confirmed the agreement to Al Jazeera, saying Egyptian mediators “succeeded in extracting approvals” from Israel to ease restrictions on employment, fishing, electricity and aid from Qatar.

Humanitarian agencies blame the blockade for the high rates of poverty and unemployment in Gaza – a main reason for the weekly protests.

More than 260 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the demonstrations, mostly by Israeli fire, according to the health ministry in Gaza.. Thousands of others have been wounded.

Israel’s use of lethal force against protesters has drawn criticism from the United Nations, as well as rights groups. 

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Cowboys Legend Michael Irvin Announces He’s Cancer-Free

Mike Irvin works on the Thursday Night Football set before an NFL football game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Los Angeles Chargers, in Kansas City, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Charlie Riedel/Associated Press

After undergoing a battery of tests after a throat cancer scare, Michael Irvin has been declared cancer-free. 

“Thank you God for continuing to answer Prayers and Thank you ALL for Praying,” Irvin said Sunday in an Instagram post. “I spoke with Dr St John at UCLA Medical and she has informed me that all test have come back 100!% clean. NO CANCER!!!!!! It is impossible to express my family and my appreciation for the overwhelming out pour of love, support and prayers. I was on my threshing floor dealing with the stronghold of fear. You all covered and encourage me. To God be the Glory.”

Former Dallas Cowboys teammate Emmitt Smith shared a photo of the two in a tweet:

Emmitt Smith @EmmittSmith22

God is good!!! So thankful for the good news. @michaelirvin88 is cancer free!! https://t.co/PRvfFT7bCj

Irvin announced last week he spent Sunday and Monday at Ronald Reagan Hospital in Los Angeles undergoing a series of tests:

This past football season after the @dallascowboys beat the @Saints i was so elated and hyped I lost my voice and the problem persisted for almost 2months. After visiting some of the best throat Doctors they thought it to be wise to take a deeper look at the situation. So we schedule and performed a throat biopsy. To give background I share with you that I loss my father at the young age of 51. He had throat cancer. This daemon has chased and vexed me deep in my spirit all my life. So saying I am afraid this time is a big big understatement. I AM TERRIFIED!! My Faith tells me whenever you face great fear you go to your greatness power. Mine is God. I am asking all who will. Could you please send up a prayer to help my family and I deal with whatever the results may be?

Irvin’s father died of cancer when he was a senior in high school. His older brother died of stomach cancer in 2006 at age 46.

Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said he planned to speak with Irvin “immediately” following the initial Instagram post. 

Irvin played for the Cowboys from 1988-1999, making five Pro Bowl teams and winning three Super Bowls. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2007 and is a member of the Cowboys’ Ring of Honor. 

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Erdogan’s ruling AK Party takes lead in key local polls

Istanbul, Turkey – Partial results show that Turkey‘s ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party is in the lead in Sunday’s local elections that are seen as a test for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

With 44.2 percent of the votes counted as of 8pm (17:00 GMT), an AK Party-led alliance had secured 52.3 percent of the votes countrywide, according to state-run Anadolu Agency. 

It was followed by a coalition led by the main opposition centre-left Republican People’s Party, with 37.8 of the votes.

The polls were seen as a major challenge for Erdogan and his party given a backdrop of high inflation and rising unemployment sparked by a major currency crisis last year.

The AK Party entered the race with its ally in the last two polls, the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), under the People’s Alliance. For its part, CHP joined forces with the right-wing Good (IYI) Party in the Nation Alliance.

Both blocs have fielded dozens of joint candidates in the country’s provinces, districts and towns.

With 74 percent of the votes counted In Istanbul, the country’s largest city and economic centre, Binali Yildirim, the candidate of Erdogan’s People’s Alliance and a former prime minister, was in the lead with 50.5 percent of the votes.

Ekrem Imamoglu, the Nation Alliance candidate, had 47 percent. 

In the capital, Ankara, preliminary results showed that the Nation Alliance’s Mansur Yavas had garnered 58.3 percent, followed by People’s Alliance nominee Mehmet Ozhaseki, with 37.8 percent. Fifty-three percent of the votes have been counted.

In the third largest city, Izmir, the Nation Alliance candidate Mustafa Tunc Soyer was in the lead with 58 percent of the votes. Nihat Zeybekci, the candidate of Erdogan’s bloc, had 37 percent. Forty-three of the votes have been counted. 

The polls took place against the backdrop of last year’s currency crisis and just weeks after official statistics showed that in the last two quarters of 2018 the Turkish economy slipped into its first recession in a decade, as inflation and interest rates soared due to the currency meltdown.

In February, inflation stood at just under 20 percent, while the Central Bank’s main interest rate is currently 24 percent. 

As part of an initiative to tackle rising inflation, Turkey’s government set up these discounted food stalls. pic.twitter.com/5zAIy2LvGC

— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) March 30, 2019

Different strategies

In the lead-up to Sunday’s vote, the People’s Alliance sought to link the local polls to internal and external risks threatening the country’s security.

Erdogan has often blamed foreign powers and “speculators” for the currency fluctuations and other economic woes faced by Turkey – a message he repeated this week.

For its part, the main opposition alliance has focused its campaign on the economic situation and its effect on citizens.

It also used Turkish flags in their campaigns, rather than party banners, in an apparent bid to attract voters from different backgrounds.

Ayse Kara, a 40-year-old voter in Istanbul, said she cast her ballot taking into account the stability of the country.

“I considered the economy and terror as the main issues while casting my vote. I believe everything will get more stable after the elections,” Kara, who works in manufacturing, told Al Jazeera.

Ilke Beltinge, a 25 year-old student, said she did not like the country’s current direction.

“I cast my vote for more freedoms, a better economy and a better educational system. And I hope that we will see change following these polls,” she told Al Jazeera at an Istanbul polling station.

Two people were killed in the eastern province of Malatya, and dozens of others were wounded in various provinces of Turkey in fights broke out in the voting process, state media reported.

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Danny Elfman On Dumbo, Tim Burton’s ‘Unpredictable’ Mind, And Writing His First Song At 18

Tim Burton and Danny Elfman are one of the most prolific pairs in Hollywood. For more than 30 years now, Elfman has provided the soundtrack to Burton’s signature macabre whimsy. Their latest big-screen adventure together, Disney’s live-action Dumbo, ticks all of their usual boxes: a film starring a quirky outsider (check); a fantastical setting (check); a bittersweet, sad tone (check); Michael Keaton and Danny DeVito (check and check). But that doesn’t mean that it’s all smooth sailing for Elfman. In fact, even after all these years of working together, he’d never be so bold to assume he knows what Burton likes. “His mind is a curious and interesting and unpredictable place,” the composer tells MTV News.

Speaking to MTV News at a recent press day for the film, Elfman talks about his creative partnership with Burton, how he broke his cardinal rule for Dumbo, and why he picked up a violin at age 18 — a move that, by pure chance, solidified his entire career.

MTV News: You and Tim have worked together for over 30 years now, and you’ve got such a incredible creative partnership. How would you describe that relationship?

Danny Elfman: It’s kind of hard to say. It’s always full of surprises for me. I learned long ago never to take Tim for granted. People think that we have this automatic thing together, but we really don’t. He’s got things that are in his head that he’s going to have to evolve during the making of the film, and I’m going to need to do a lot of experimenting to figure it out, and to help him figure out what it is he wants. So it’s usually something of a process of honing in on just where the musical center of the film is going to be and how he feels about it. It’s always interesting, but it’s always different as well.

Getty Images

Director Tim Burton (left) and composer Danny Elfman (right)

MTV News: Would you describe it as a marriage?

Elfman: It’s weird. It’s more than a marriage; it’s almost like siblings. I think of him much like I think of my own brother, which means that we know each other really well, but yet it’s a constantly evolving thing. We occasionally have big fights, and then like with my brother, always end up feeling bad about it and making up again. It’s almost like a blood thing at this point.

MTV News: What were some of the surprises with Dumbo? Were there things that he threw at you that were unexpected?

Elfman: Originally, it’s like how are they going to make a CG Dumbo look like an elephant and fly? You know, it’s real easy in a cartoon; you just do it, and the cartoon flaps his ears, and off he goes. And if it’s a cartoon, you don’t think about it. But here, he looks more real and how is that going to work? That was my single biggest question. And then I saw how they designed him, and somehow it just felt real when he took off flying. I go, “Yeah, OK. I buy that.”

MTV News: Did you have to see Dumbo and how he would look before you could start working on the score?

Elfman: That’s almost always the case. I usually don’t write anything before I see something. That’s a lesson I learned all the way back on Beetlejuice, where I started writing a month early because I had some extra time. And then I saw the movie, and none of what I had written … it all got thrown out the first day. I saw it, and it’s, like, that’s not what I was imagining — just so different. So I began a process of doing the opposite when I went into movies, and trying to blank out my mind as much as possible until I see a movie for the first time, and Dumbo was a rare exception. Because I got the call and I thought about the character, Dumbo, being parted from his mother, and I wrote a theme a year early, and recorded it and put it away in a file. I didn’t think about it again. And then a year later, I come back, and it’s like I know I did something, somewhere. I’m lucky I found it because in fact it ended up being Dumbo’s theme.

MTV News: Did you go to the animated film at all for any inspiration?

Elfman: I had actually never seen the whole animated film until I got brought on the project. It wasn’t actually part of my childhood. I remember seeing parts of it with my own children, but I hadn’t seen it before I was an adult, and I don’t think I ever saw the whole thing. So I was surprised many, many years later when I went and put it on, it’s like, oh my god, “Pink Elephants on Parade” is so recognizable. I loved that song. And “Casey Junior.” I was very eager to pay homage to both of those tunes in the score.

Disney

MTV News: Dumbo is a story about an outsider, and these kinds of characters tend to resonate with you and Burton quite well. Why is that?

Elfman: When Tim and I first met, I think the reason why we connected, we were both very much outsiders as a kid. His idol in life was Vincent Price and mine was Peter Lorre. That kind of says a lot about the two of us. We grew up in a similar way: Los Angeles kids who grew up on many of the same movies. We both had our own personal reasons for feeling connected to outsider characters in just our own lives. And for myself, because I can’t speak for Tim, I always felt disconnected somewhat from popular culture and things around me.

MTV News: I think people go into a Tim Burton-Danny Elfman collaboration with a certain expectation. It’s going to be dark and whimsical and macabre. Do you ever feel like you have to, or want to, defy those expectations?

Elfman: You can only do that so far, because a film’s demands are the film’s demands. As much as I may want personally to move completely outside of my wheelhouse and keep myself always challenged, ultimately you have to do what the film asks for. And I also learned this a long time ago, that it’s just wrong to put my own personal desires above the needs of the score. The way I’ve resolved it is I split my year now between writing film music and concert music.

The concert music allows me to just go totally outside of anything I’m comfortable with as much as I like, and I get that out of my system. And when I’m on a movie, I try to look for something fresh, something I could do to keep it fun for myself. But on the other hand, I’m realizing in the context of a film like Dumbo, I’m not going to totally surprise anybody. No one’s going to say, “That doesn’t sound like Danny Elfman.” To do that, I would have had to really not work to the film’s best interests.

MTV News: How did you keep things fresh for Dumbo?

Elfman: In this one, it was all the circus and clown music; something I really jumped into and wanted to do every minute of it because I love that kind of stuff. And I usually don’t like doing source music, but I told Tim, “I want to do every single second of source music if it has anything to do with the circus.”

MTV News: You were talking about how every score has its own set of needs. What were the needs of this score in particular?

Elfman: Primarily, there has to be a bittersweet tune, a melody that can do a lot of different things. The same melody had to play the heartbreak of this little, poor baby elephant being taken away from his mama, but it also has to play the triumph of him flying over crowds, and saving and rescuing his friends. I knew that it was going to be kind of a monothematic film to a large extent, even though there were some other themes, but that the theme would have to do a lot of different things.

Disney

Burton on the set of Dumbo

MTV News: Would you say that was the biggest challenge for you?

Elfman: No. The biggest challenge always for me is not so much that. It’s really figuring out what’s going to work for Tim. That’s the challenge because his mind is a curious and interesting and unpredictable place. I never think, “Oh, Tim’s going to love this,” because he’s surprised me for 17 films, all the time, by picking up on some weird piece of music that I didn’t think he was going to like and having that become his favorite piece, and something that I would think would be a slam dunk, he was like, hmmm, not so much. So I never have any expectations of what he’s going to like or not like when I start his movies.

MTV News: You’ve had such a prolific career, and you’ve scored so many projects, so many films and TV shows. But do you remember the first song you ever wrote, and what that was like? What was it?

Elfman: The first thing I ever wrote… I was 18 and I had just picked up my first instrument six months earlier, which was a violin. My brother lived in Paris and he was with a theater, musical theater troupe called the Grand Magic Circus. I was visiting him and practicing in the other room, and I didn’t know the director had come over when I closed the doors. And I came out and he said, “Eh, you’re pretty good. Why don’t you come play with us?” So six months into playing my first instrument, I toured with this French theatrical troupe for a month. And during that period, he asked me to write a couple of things. It had never even occurred to me before. Honestly, before I was 18 I never had any thoughts of getting into music.

MTV News: Why the violin?

Elfman: Because I was going to travel for a year in Africa, and it was either a flute or a violin. They were the only things small enough to bring around, and the flute didn’t appeal to me.

MTV News: So you brought your violin to Africa?

Elfman: I did. I spent a year dragging a violin around. It was in the beginning of that trip that I met with the Grand Magic Circus. I finished my stint with them, and I went off for a year in Africa with my violin.

MTV News: And now you’re making circus music professionally.

Elfman: Yes, exactly. And here I am, making circus music. Full circle!

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EPL Live: Liverpool vs. Tottenham

  1. Squawka Football @Squawka

  2. Mane Copying Celebrations Again 😂

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Celebrate like your friends 🙌 https://t.co/yte75m1ZDB

  3. Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Perfect cross for the Firmino finish 💪

    (via @NBCSportsSoccer)
    https://t.co/O2UG2d55wq

  4. Fabinho and Naby Keita on LFC Bench

    James Pearce @JamesPearceEcho

    #LFC line up v Spurs today: Alisson, Alexander-Arnold, Matip, Van Dijk, Robertson, Henderson, Wijnaldum, Milner, Mane, Salah, Firmino.
    Subs: Mignolet, Fabinho, Lovren, Keita, Lallana, Shaqiri, Origi.

  5. Live: Huge Liverpool vs. Spurs Clash

    via Bleacher Report

  6. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  7. ITV Football @itvfootball

  8. Ben Pearce @BenPearceSpurs

  9. Son on Spurs Bench vs. Liverpool

    Tottenham Hotspur @SpursOfficial

    #THFC: Lloris (C), Trippier, Alderweireld, Sanchez, Vertonghen, Rose, Sissoko, Eriksen, Dele, Lucas, Kane.

    Latest odds from @WilliamHill (18+) 👉 https://t.co/wG3waV6lhh

    #PL ⚪ #COYS https://t.co/0DEqTAq9F7

  10. E-Spurs @e_spurs

  11. Standard Sport @standardsport

  12. Liverpool FC @LFC

  13. Liverpool FC @LFC

  14. Jack Lusby @jacklusby_

  15. Dan Kennett @DanKennett

  16. Alasdair Gold @AlasdairGold

  17. Goal @goal

  18. Emma Sanders @em_sandy

  19. Anfield Edition @AnfieldEdition

  20. 90min @90min_Football

  21. Standard Sport @standardsport

  22. MailOnline Sport @MailSport

  23. The Redmen TV @TheRedmenTV

  24. Independent Sport @IndoSport

  25. Chris Miller @WindyCOYS

  26. football.london @Football_LDN

  27. BBC Sport @BBCSport

  28. Liverpool FC @liverpool

  29. AS English @English_AS

  30. Phil McNulty @philmcnulty

  31. James Pearce @JamesPearceEcho

  32. Football365 @F365

  33. Fantasy Football Scout @FFScout

  34. World Soccer Talk @worldsoccertalk

  35. Tottenham Hotspur @SpursOfficial

  36. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  37. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  38. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  39. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  40. E-Spurs @e_spurs

  41. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  42. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  43. MailOnline Sport @MailSport

  44. Joe Prince-Wright @JPW_NBCSports

  45. Dominic King @DominicKing_DM

  46. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  47. 90min @90min_Football

  48. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  49. Liverpool FC @LFC

  50. Anfield Edition @AnfieldEdition

  51. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  52. Standard Sport @standardsport

  53. AnfieldIndex @AnfieldIndex

  54. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  55. Joe Prince-Wright @JPW_NBCSports

  56. Alasdair Gold @AlasdairGold

  57. Phil McNulty @philmcnulty

  58. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  59. Tottenham Hotspur @SpursOfficial

  60. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

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EPL Live: Liverpool vs. Tottenham

  1. Squawka Football @Squawka

  2. Mane Copying Celebrations Again 😂

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Celebrate like your friends 🙌 https://t.co/yte75m1ZDB

  3. Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Perfect cross for the Firmino finish 💪

    (via @NBCSportsSoccer)
    https://t.co/O2UG2d55wq

  4. Fabinho and Naby Keita on LFC Bench

    James Pearce @JamesPearceEcho

    #LFC line up v Spurs today: Alisson, Alexander-Arnold, Matip, Van Dijk, Robertson, Henderson, Wijnaldum, Milner, Mane, Salah, Firmino.
    Subs: Mignolet, Fabinho, Lovren, Keita, Lallana, Shaqiri, Origi.

  5. Live: Huge Liverpool vs. Spurs Clash

    via Bleacher Report

  6. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  7. ITV Football @itvfootball

  8. Ben Pearce @BenPearceSpurs

  9. Son on Spurs Bench vs. Liverpool

    Tottenham Hotspur @SpursOfficial

    #THFC: Lloris (C), Trippier, Alderweireld, Sanchez, Vertonghen, Rose, Sissoko, Eriksen, Dele, Lucas, Kane.

    Latest odds from @WilliamHill (18+) 👉 https://t.co/wG3waV6lhh

    #PL ⚪ #COYS https://t.co/0DEqTAq9F7

  10. E-Spurs @e_spurs

  11. Standard Sport @standardsport

  12. Liverpool FC @LFC

  13. Liverpool FC @LFC

  14. Jack Lusby @jacklusby_

  15. Dan Kennett @DanKennett

  16. Alasdair Gold @AlasdairGold

  17. Goal @goal

  18. Emma Sanders @em_sandy

  19. Anfield Edition @AnfieldEdition

  20. 90min @90min_Football

  21. Standard Sport @standardsport

  22. MailOnline Sport @MailSport

  23. The Redmen TV @TheRedmenTV

  24. Independent Sport @IndoSport

  25. Chris Miller @WindyCOYS

  26. football.london @Football_LDN

  27. BBC Sport @BBCSport

  28. Liverpool FC @liverpool

  29. AS English @English_AS

  30. Phil McNulty @philmcnulty

  31. James Pearce @JamesPearceEcho

  32. Football365 @F365

  33. Fantasy Football Scout @FFScout

  34. World Soccer Talk @worldsoccertalk

  35. Tottenham Hotspur @SpursOfficial

  36. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  37. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  38. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  39. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  40. E-Spurs @e_spurs

  41. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  42. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  43. MailOnline Sport @MailSport

  44. Joe Prince-Wright @JPW_NBCSports

  45. Dominic King @DominicKing_DM

  46. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  47. 90min @90min_Football

  48. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  49. Liverpool FC @LFC

  50. Anfield Edition @AnfieldEdition

  51. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  52. Standard Sport @standardsport

  53. AnfieldIndex @AnfieldIndex

  54. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  55. Joe Prince-Wright @JPW_NBCSports

  56. Alasdair Gold @AlasdairGold

  57. Phil McNulty @philmcnulty

  58. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  59. Tottenham Hotspur @SpursOfficial

  60. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

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