Josh Rosen Trade Rumors: Redskins Have ‘Openly’ Discussed QB If Made Available

Arizona Cardinals quarterback Josh Rosen warms-up before the first half of an NFL football game against the Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018, in Seattle. (AP Photo/John Froschauer)

John Froschauer/Associated Press

Even though Josh Rosen hasn’t officially been made available in trade talks by the Arizona Cardinals, one potential suitor has emerged for the second-year quarterback. 

Per Tony Pauline of DraftAnalyst.com, the Washington Redskins have “openly spoken” about trading for Rosen if he is put on the market.

Rumors about Rosen’s future with the Cardinals have already picked up steam thanks to Kyler Murray’s presence in the 2019 NFL draft. 

Per NFL Network’s Kimberly Jones (h/t NFL.com’s Jeremy Bergman), people around the league are “beginning to believe almost universally” that Murray will be taken by Arizona with the No. 1 overall pick. 

After being drafted 10th overall last year, Rosen struggled as a rookie for the Cardinals. He threw for 2,278 yards, 11 touchdowns and 14 interceptions in 14 games. 

Washington seems likely to be in the market for a long-term answer at quarterback. The team thinks Alex Smith will miss all of 2019 because of the broken leg he suffered in Week 11 against the Houston Texans, per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport.

Despite Rosen’s numbers, it’s easy to see why he would be an attractive trade candidate to teams that need a quarterback. He’s only 22 years old, and his cap number will be under $6 million for each of the next three seasons. 

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Refugees in Libya ‘tortured’ for breaking out of detention centre

As many as 30 refugees and migrants, including minors, are believed to have been brought to an underground cell and allegedly tortured in Libya for breaking out and holding a protest earlier this week.

An estimated 150 male detainees escaped from the large cell on Tuesday in Tripoli’s Triq al Sikka, where some of them have been held for more than a year, to lodge their protest with Libya’s Department of Combatting Illegal Migration (DCIM).

They protested against the conditions under which they have been detained, and demanded a visit from an official from the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), according to witnesses.

An estimated 150 detainees broke out of the large cell on Tuesday [Al Jazeera]

The majority of those detained in the past 18 months were returned to Libya by the European Union-funded Libyan coastguard after they tried to cross the Mediterranean Sea to reach Europe.

Three witnesses told Al Jazeera how Libyan guards surrounded the male refugees and migrants before beginning to beat them with sticks and metal bars.

They alleged that as many as four people passed out from the beatings. Women, who were being held in a separate area, screamed throughout the ordeal, they said.

The International Rescue Committee, which provides medical care in the detention centre, confirmed that two detainees were taken to hospital on Tuesday, though a spokesperson said they couldn’t confirm why.

Witnesses said dozens of detainees were then put in buses and moved to other detention centres, while two of them said those suspected of leading the protest were rounded up and brought to an underground cell, where they were allegedly tortured.

As many as six of those taken underground are believed to be minors, they said.

“They locked them up because they want to frighten them not to talk and to make the others frightened,” a refugee said.

Those who remained in Triq al Sikka were injured and in need of help, according to detainees who were moved elsewhere.

Witnesses said Tuesday’s protest started after a visit to the detention centre by diplomats from Netherlands.

“They started to beat [us] the moment the embassy staff left the detention centre… Policemen came, about 100 of them from other places and started beating us with metal, plastic and wood,” a witness said.

One refugee, who knew others held in the same underground cell as punishment for trying to escape, said, “People earlier were released after months. That place is so bad. There’s no place to walk, it’s dark, it’s so small.”

Refugees and migrants formerly held in Triq al Sikka have said they were kept in the dark all day, regularly abused, given little food and denied medical help.

In October, a 28-year-old Somali man, returned to Libya by the coastguard, burned himself to death in Triq al Sikka detention centre, after saying he felt hopeless about his chances of getting out.

‘Detention centres must be closed’

An EU spokesperson said they were aware of the report and following the situation closely. “As repeatedly said, the detention centres in Libya must be closed,” the spokesperson said.

“The situation in these centres is unacceptable. The EU raises the unacceptable condition in detention centres in all of its meetings with relevant Libyan authorities at both political and technical level, in Tripoli and elsewhere.”

Rights group Amnesty International’s Matteo De Bellis said of the report of abuse, “if confirmed, constitutes yet another case of brutal violence against people arbitrarily held in Libya’s notoriously abusive detention centres”.

“European governments and institutions keep saying that they advocate the end of arbitrary detention of refugees and migrants, but they have not taken any decisive action to ensure this would happen,” De Bellis said.

Libya’s DCIM, the UNHCR and the Dutch ministry of foreign affairs did not respond to Al Jazeera’s requests for comment.

Migrants and refugees in Libya are bought to detention centres that are formally under the authority of the country’s interior ministry but in reality are controlled by armed groups, the real power in the country.

Thousands of refugees and migrants are currently being held in indefinite detention by DCIM. Many were deported back to Libya after the boats they were on, en route to Italy, were intercepted by the EU-funded Libyan coastguard.

Among them are people from Somalia, Eritrea, or Sudan – countries at war or having dictatorships, where gross human rights abuses are taking place.

Around 15,000 refugees and migrants were returned to Libya last year under a 2017 deal in which the EU supports the Libyan coastguard to carry out interceptions at sea by supplying funds, ships and training.

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Grant Williams, No. 7 Tennessee Blow out No. 4 Kentucky 71-52

Tennessee forward Grant Williams (2) shoots as as Kentucky forward PJ Washington (25) and forward Nick Richards (4) defend during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, March 2, 2019, in Knoxville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)

Wade Payne/Associated Press

The No. 7 Tennessee Volunteers remained atop the SEC on Saturday with a 71-52 blowout win over the No. 4 Kentucky Wildcats at Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tennessee.

With the win, Tennessee avenged an 86-69 road loss to Kentucky last month that knocked it from the No. 1 ranking. The Volunteers are now 26-3 on the season and tied for first with LSU in the SEC at 14-2, while the Wildcats are 24-5 overall and 13-3 in the conference.

Junior forward Grant Williams and junior guard Jordan Bone led the way for Tennessee on Saturday, as they finished with 24 points and seven rebounds, and 27 points and three assists, respectively.

Kentucky’s stars didn’t fare nearly as well in what was a miserable shooting performance from the Wildcats. Sophomore forward PJ Washington registered 13 points and three rebounds, and freshman guard Keldon Johnson ended up with seven points and seven rebounds.

Overall, the Wildcats shot just 31.8 percent from the field and 26.3 percent from deep, while the Vols shot 43.5 percent from the field and 36.4 percent from long range.

Kentucky was also thoroughly dominated by Tennessee in the paint with Reid Travis missing his third consecutive game because of a knee sprain.

Tennessee owned a 37-24 lead at halftime that was owed in part to a 16-2 run during a nearly seven-minute stretch. Among the highlights for Tennessee during that run was this monster jam from senior guard Admiral Schofield:

CBS Sports @CBSSports

“THAT’S A MAN’S JAM” https://t.co/59Cpkn2eDn

The 24 points scored by the Wildcats were their fewest in a single half this season.

Their struggles in the first seemed to carry over into the second, as Tennessee was able to extend its lead over the first several minutes. The Volunteers went on a 10-3 run to start the second half and led by as many as 20.

Kentucky simply couldn’t find enough rhythm on offense to hang with Tennessee, and the Wildcats are now in danger of missing out on the regular-season SEC crown.

Grant Williams Deserves National Player of the Year Consideration

Williams often gets lost in the shuffle when it comes to the Naismith College Player of the Year conversation, but after coming up big once again in a huge game Saturday, the narrative needs to change.

The 6’7″, 236-pound big man proved too much for Kentucky to handle in the paint, as he managed to get to the free-throw line on 11 occasions.

That has been one of Williams’ greatest assets this season even if it isn’t an ability that generally draws a ton of praise, as pointed out by Seth Davis of CBS Sports:

Seth Davis @SethDavisHoops

“Grant Williams is so good at drawing fouls.”

I think that’s a compliment.

Williams gets criticized at times because of the notion that he flops and exaggerates contact in order to get to the line, but there is no question that Tennessee is better for whatever he does to draw fouls. Kent Spencer of WHAS said as much Saturday:

Kent Spencer @WHAS11Kent

Credit Grant Williams…. that kid works the officials…. he’s responsible for the officials looking at this play

Williams is also a quality rebounder, and he showed during the win over Kentucky that he can do more than the typical big man. His smooth passing was also on display, especially when he found Jordan Bowden for an alley-oop that had whipped Volunteers fans into a frenzy.

Grant Ramey of 247Sports pointed out that Williams’ pass may have elicited the loudest reaction to ever emanate from Thompson-Boling Arena:

@GrantRamey @GrantRamey

Grant Williams throws an oop to Jordan Bowden and I’m not sure I’ve ever heard this building get that loud.

Tennessee 34, Kentucky 20 (1:36)

As the emotional and statistical leader of one of the top teams in college basketball, Williams should be mentioned in the same breath as players like the Duke freshman combo of Zion Williamson and RJ Barrett or Marquette’s Markus Howard more often.

Williams has the type of profile to look for in the College Player of the Year, as he was named SEC Player of the Year last year, although he doesn’t have the benefit of being viewed as a blue-chip prospect when he entered the college ranks.

If Williams can secure another SEC Player of the Year award this season as expected, he will become the first player to do it in back-to-back years in nearly 25 years, per Matt Norlander of CBS Sports:

Matt Norlander @MattNorlander

Grant Williams probably locking up SEC Player of the Year thanks to this performance today. He’ll become the first back-to-back winner of the award since Corliss Williamson in ‘94 and ’95.

Williams was lightly recruited by power-conference schools, and there was almost no hype surrounding him when he came to Tennessee unlike players like Williamson and Barrett this year.

If anything, Williams deserves some added credit for overcoming that stigma and developing into one of college basketball’s best players.

Williams also showed great resilience against Kentucky on Saturday. In the first meeting between the teams this season, Williams only attempted four shots from the field and didn’t do enough to keep his team in the lead.

He did more than enough Saturday, and he is a big reason why the Vols control their own destiny when it comes to winning a share of the SEC title. 

What’s Next?

Tennessee will host the Mississippi State Bulldogs on Tuesday before closing out its regular-season slate on March 9 against the Auburn Tigers on the road.

Meanwhile, Kentucky will face the Ole Miss Rebels away from home Tuesday, and then host the Florida Gators in its final game of the regular season.

This article will be updated to provide more information soon.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.

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Women land defenders face ‘extreme criminalisation’, added risks

El Estor, Guatemala – Since her teen years, Maria Magdalena Cuc Choc, now 39, has defended the natural resources of El Estor, a predominantly Mayan Q’eqchi’ community on the western edge of Lake Izabal. The calm, blue water surrounded by lush forest cover is home to hundreds of species of freshwater fish, lizards, crocodiles, manatees and more.

The natural beauty of El Estor makes it an area of intense conflict in Guatemala, with petroleum and mining companies frequently clashing with local communities over rights to resources.

Cuc Choc started attending activist meetings in El Estor at age 13 with her brother Ramiro, another prominent activist, but their experiences quickly diverged. While both have been subject of threats and smear campaigns, Cuc Choc has been threatened with sexual violence, physically abused by her father and ex-husband because of her work, and received vulgar and explicit gender-related insults.

“It’s hard to find women who are well-organised in this work, because there always exists machismo behind us,” said Cuc Choc.

Guatemala is one of the most dangerous countries worldwide for natural resource conflicts, with 26 land rights defenders murdered in 2018, more than double than the year before, according to Frontline Defenders’ annual report.

Of the 321 rights defenders killed worldwide that same year, Frontline Defenders found that 75 percent were in Latin America, where relaxed regulations, corruption and weak protections for defenders often mean such murders go unpunished.

Saturday marks three years since the murder of prominent Honduran environmental activist Berta Caceres, who was vocal opponent of a hydroelectric dam project in an indigenous community and a feminist leader who believed that land and environmental rights are inextricably linked to women’s rights. 

A protester holds up a picture of slain environmental rights activist Berta Caceres [File: Jorge Cabrera/Reuters] 

Although seven men were recently convicted and Honduran prosecutors have indicated the mastermind of the murder will be charged, rights groups say the Honduran government has a responsibility to punish all those involved and “send a clear message to Honduran society and the entire world that there will be no impunity for this type of crime against defenders of the land and the environment”.

Only 12 percent of the land rights defenders assassinated in 2018 were women, but female land defenders are exposed to additional violence and intimidation. Pressure to stop pursuing their work comes both from their critics and their own community.

“We as women are even more affected,” said Genoveva Marroquin Chavez of the National Union of Guatemalan Women (UNAMG), an organization that supports female activists and feminist social movements, including women land rights defenders in El Estor.

“Male human rights defenders are criminalised, but they don’t say he is out looking for wife, or that he is a prostitute, or so many other things. There is another form of criminalisation women face, which is more extreme, just for being a woman,” she said. 

Campaigns to criminalise these women and delegitimise their work often attack them on the basis of gender. Sexual violence against female land rights defenders and their daughters is used as an intimidation technique. When these women return home, they often lack the support of their fathers, brothers and husbands for their work, and may even suffer physical violence at the hands of their male family members. Plus, women face the added burden of carrying out their activism on top of household and childcare responsibilities.

Women are an indispensable part of the fight for human rights worldwide, but without specialised networks to protect them, they can end up vulnerable and excluded.

‘Men’s work’

From a young age, Cuc Choc realised defending the land was designated for men. Her father was involved in community activism, but disapproved of her getting involved, even beating her on at least three occasions that Cuc Choc could remember. 

“He had the mentality that women shouldn’t leave the house,” she said.

At meetings with Ramiro, men always spoke up, while women sat quietly in the back. Yet women have “brilliant ideas”, Cuc Choc said.

“So often, we are threatened by own fathers, brothers, or husbands,” she said. “A woman may be shy, quiet and silent, but you don’t know why.”

“I always made sure the women claimed their space and participated,” she added. “I broke this tradition even though it annoyed my brother sometimes.”

Women in El Estor lead the fight for their community’s land right despite the added risks [Anna-Cat Brigida/Al Jazeera] 

Cuc Choc soon became a well-respected activist in her community, organising key actions against the Guatemalan Nickel Company (CGN for the Spanish acronym), a local subsidiary of Canadian mining company Hudbay Minerals, over a controversial nickel mining project in El Estor.

But along with her growing profile as an activist came threats, intimidation and the delegitimisation of her work by critics.

Arbitrary arrests

On January 17, 2018, Cuc Choc was arrested on charges of aggravated usurpation, threats and illegal detention, one year after authorities issued a warrant.  

Activists working in the region claim detaining human rights defenders on these grounds is a common criminalisation tactic.

“These are crimes they accuse all human rights defenders of in all of the judicial processes,” said Marroquin Chavez of UNAMG. “Since the charges are always the same, [the government] often can’t sustain the arguments for these crimes, because they don’t exist.”

Authorities often wait for key moments in land conflicts to arrest defenders, she added.

Cuc Choc was let out on provisional release after two days of detention. She now has to report monthly to officials and she cannot travel outside the department of Izabal.

Threats against her and her family, including threats of rape, have increased.

“We as women are not only being attacked by a system that is against human rights defenders,” said Marroquin Chavez. “They also threaten your body and your integrity.”

Dozens of land rights defenders in Guatemala have gone through the same process of arbitrary detention, according to UNAMG.

When male land rights defenders are detained, the entire family is affected, particularly their wives.

On June 29, 2018, vice president of El Estor’s fishers’ union Eduardo Bin was detained for illegal usurpation of a protected area.

His wife Alicia Caal Pop, 50, now struggles to support their eight children without him.

“It’s difficult for me now. My kids are still studying and the only work I have is doing my neighbours’ laundry,” she said in Q’eqchi through a translator. Without the additional food and income from her husband’s fishing, the family scrapes by with barely enough corn and beans to eat.

Alicia Caal Pop’s husband was arrested in 2018, and now must carry the weight of supporting her family as she continues to fight for her community’s land [Anna-Cat Brigida/Al Jazeera] 

With the extra burden of caring for the family without her husband’s support, maintaining her role protecting the lake has been difficult. But she sees activism as a way to set an example for her children.

“It’s my responsibility as a mother to take care of my kids, but also to educate them,” Caal Pop said. “We as women also have to participate in the meetings. I have to show this to my kids, that they shouldn’t just stay behind.”

Sexual violence

On January 17, 2007, police, military and private security guards forcibly evicted the residents of Lote 8, El Estor, to clear the land for nickel mining, at that time for Canadian company Hudbay Minerals.

The men of the community were in the fields, and the women at home. Eleven women, including Margarita Caal Caal, have now come forward to say they were raped during the forced eviction.

“It’s the women who end up being affected the most because the woman is the one who is there fighting for these lands,” said Caal Caal in Q’eqchi’ through a translator.

We as women are always in this work, staying active, even though many want to put out the flame that we have inside us. But we are always giving a little bit more firewood so that the flame stays active. Despite the struggles, there is always a woman there supporting the cause.

Maria Magdalena Cuc Choc

In 2013, the 11 women filed a lawsuit in a Canadian court for their rape during the eviction, despite fear of repression.

“They often say that whoever files a lawsuit against these people is threatened with assassination, so that’s a fear that we carried,” she said.

The women still await a verdict in the case, but believe the sheer act of coming forward can help shed light on the violence that women face defending their land in Guatemala.

“Searching for justice is more about bringing public attention to what is happening to people,” Caal Caal said. “When you decide to seek justice, you are also thinking about leaving something for your kids so they can see the benefits of your fight.”

Continuing the fight

Efforts to support women like Cuc Choc, Caal Pop and Caal Caal have increased in recent years. 

In 2010, a group of women formed the Mesoamerican Initiative of Women Defenders of Human Rights, a coalition of human rights organizations that focuses specifically on gender threats against women working in Mexico and Central America. Other regional initiatives exist in the Middle East and Africa.

In December 2013, the UN General Assembly issued a resolution recognizing the unique challenges that female human rights defenders face and calling on countries to ensure these women’s right to carry out their activism in peaceful ways and to provide specialized protections, including legal, medical and social services.

“We as women are always in this work, staying active, even though many want to put out the flame that we have inside us,” said Cuc Choc. “But we are always giving a little bit more firewood so that the flame stays active. Despite the struggles, there is always a woman there supporting the cause.”

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Bryce Harper: Roy Halladay Should Be Last Phillies Player to Wear No. 34

Bryce Harper adjust his cap as he introduced as a Philadelphia Phillies player during a news conference at the team's spring training baseball facility, Saturday, March 2, 2019, in Clearwater, Fla. Harper and the Phillies agreed to a $330 million, 13-year contract, the largest deal in baseball history. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Lynne Sladky/Associated Press

Newly signed Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Bryce Harper gave some insight Saturday regarding why he switched from jersey No. 34 to No. 3.

In a press conference at Spectrum Field in Clearwater, Florida, Harper said late National Baseball Hall of Famer Roy Halladay should be the last player in Phillies history to wear No. 34:

NBC Sports Philadelphia @NBCSPhilly

“I wore No. 34. But I thought Roy Halladay should be the last to wear it.”

Bryce Harper has the utmost respect for the Hall of Famer. https://t.co/Q9pTXqALFU

Halladay spent four seasons with the Phillies from 2010 to 2013 after he played for the Toronto Blue Jays over the first 12 seasons of his MLB career.

With the Phillies, Halladay was twice named a National League All-Star, and he won the NL Cy Young Award in 2010 before finishing second in 2011. Also, in 2010, Halladay threw just the second postseason no-hitter in MLB history when he shut down the Cincinnati Reds in a National League Division Series.

Halladay finished his career with a 203-105 record, 3.38 ERA, eight All-Star nods and two Cy Young Awards.

He died in November 2017 at the age of 40 when a plane he was piloting crashed. Halladay was selected for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame this year.

During Saturday’s press conference, Harper called Halladay “somebody that played the game the right way” and “a great person.”

Harper wore No. 34 during his seven-year stint with the Washington Nationals, but No. 3 is also meaningful to him because both his brother and father wore it in high school, according to Jim Salisbury of NBC Sports Philadelphia.

The Harper jersey figures to be a big seller in Philadelphia and across the world this season after he signed a 13-year, $330 million deal with the Phillies this week.

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‘I know where I came from’: Sanders outlines life story at campaign kickoff rally


Bernie Sanders

Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks during a rally to kick off his 2020 U.S. presidential campaign in Brooklyn, the New York City borough where Sanders grew up in a rent-controlled apartment. “I know where I came from,” he said. “And that is something I will never forget.” | Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images

2020 elections

Sanders’ allies have long pushed him to talk more about his past, arguing that it is a powerful story that could help him build trust with Americans who feel attacked President Trump.

BROOKLYN, N.Y. — Bernie Sanders finally got personal.

After rarely talking about his early years in his first chase for the White House, the Vermont senator started his 2020 bid here at a rally highlighting his origins as the son of an immigrant, a lower-middle-class child and a young civil rights activist.

Story Continued Below

Sanders and a group of speakers that preceded him, including South Carolina state Rep. Terry Alexander, criminal justice activist Shaun King and former Ohio state Sen. Nina Turner, sought to weave together his little-known personal history with his well-known left-wing policies.

They also contrasted Sanders’ life story with that of President Donald Trump’s.

“I did not have a father who gave me millions of dollars to build luxury skyscrapers, casinos and country clubs,” Sanders said. “I did not come from a family that gave me a $200,000 allowance every year beginning at the age of three.”

Sanders and others said that he helped lead the first known sit-in at the University of Chicago, attended the March on Washington and was arrested while protesting school segregation.

“This is not some exaggerated myth,” King said. “This is the origin story of a political revolutionary.”

They also talked about Sanders’ childhood in a rent-controlled apartment in Brooklyn, where economic stresses often weighed on his household, as well as his experience of seeing his parents die at a young age. Sanders said his fathers’ family members were “wiped out” in the Holocaust.

“I know where I came from,” he said. “And that is something I will never forget.”

Sanders’ rally was held at Brooklyn College, which he attended for one year. Tomorrow, he is continuing the tour of his roots with an event in Chicago, where he graduated from college and participated in the civil rights movement.

Sanders’ allies have long pushed him to talk more about his past, arguing that it is a powerful story that could help him build trust with Americans who feel attacked by Trump.

Sanders failed to win over most older voters in 2016, especially those of color. Since announcing his 2020 campaign last month, he has announced a diverse group of top aides and co-chairs, including Turner.

In many ways, Saturday’s event was a peek at the personal origins of Sanders’ class rage that has powered his political career.

The rally was also likely designed to show what his supporters believe is the breadth of his coalition, featuring a diverse array of speakers, including some from states that Sanders lost in the 2016 primary such as South Carolina and Pennsylvania. Scott Slawson, an Erie labor leader whose union went on strike this week and whose members’ employer was criticized by Sanders in his CNN town hall, also talked at the event.

The Sanders campaign did not immediately provide an estimate of the crowd at Saturday’s rally.

Though Sanders and others spent a great deal of time highlighting his biography, his speech began and ended in a familiar place: He railed against income inequality and “the billionaire class,” the “insurance companies” and the “drug companies.” He also spoke about criminal justice and an anti-interventionist foreign policy.

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Live: Kentucky, Tennessee Fight for Control of SEC

  1. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  2. Nick Richards throws down the alley-oop!

  3. Nick Richards Early Oop

    CBS Sports CBB @CBSSportsCBB

    Nick Richards with the OOP slam. https://t.co/1Agb5krj9H

  4. Johnson Says Hi to UT Fans 😝

    Matt Jones @KySportsRadio

    How Keldon Johnson said hello to Tennessee fans (@jdunnlex18) https://t.co/sX59ip2ZKF

  5. Who Ya Got in This Top-10 Rematch?

    NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    SEC showdown in Knoxville! 👀

    Who ya got? https://t.co/AntRNgXxgl

  6. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  7. Joe Rexrode @joerexrode

  8. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  9. Vols Try to Redeem Themselves in Rematch with Kentucky

    via All for Tennessee

  10. Students Camp Outside of Thompson-Boling Ahead of Game vs. UK

    via Knoxville News Sentinel

  11. PJ Washington Is Blocking Out the Noise Going into Rematch with UT

    via Kentucky Sports Radio

  12. Scott Charlton @Scott_Charlton

  13. Wes Rucker @wesrucker247

  14. Trey Wallace @TreyWallace_

  15. UK Drops UT Hype Tape 🔥

    Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

    Big game today. Fortunately, we know a thing or two about big games.

    Let’s. Go.

    #UKvsUT https://t.co/Ro6rAAXa7G

  16. Pair of Cats Continue Climb in Latest Mock Drafts

    via CatsPause

  17. Rick Barnes Talks Madness

    NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    Rick Barnes knows all about making the big dance.

    The @Vol_Hoops head coach sits down with @TheAndyKatz about the emotion of #MarchMadness! https://t.co/yIEcd278ss

  18. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  19. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  20. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  21. The Best TBT

    CBS Sports @CBSSports

    Flashback to the 2014 NCAA Tournament, when @KentuckyMBB’s Aaron Harrison could not stop hitting clutch shots. https://t.co/7m5t8CYF6M

  22. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  23. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  24. Wes Rucker @wesrucker247

  25. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  26. John Clay @johnclayiv

  27. Joe Rexrode @joerexrode

  28. Orange & White Report @OandWReport

  29. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  30. Tennessee Basketball @Vol_Hoops

  31. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  32. TheCatsPause247 @TheCatsPause247

  33. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  34. Trey Wallace @TreyWallace_

  35. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  36. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  37. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  38. TheCatsPause247 @TheCatsPause247

  39. Jon Hale @JonHale_CJ

  40. Bobby Reagan @BarstoolReags

  41. Jon Hale @JonHale_CJ

  42. Chris Fisher @ChrisFisher247

  43. Wes Rucker @wesrucker247

  44. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  45. Scott Charlton @Scott_Charlton

  46. Matt Jones @KySportsRadio

  47. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  48. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  49. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  50. Scott Charlton @Scott_Charlton

  51. David Sisk @CoachDavidSisk

  52. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  53. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  54. Jon Hale @JonHale_CJ

  55. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  56. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  57. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  58. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  59. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  60. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

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Live: Kentucky, Tennessee Fight for Control of SEC

  1. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  2. Nick Richards throws down the alley-oop!

  3. Nick Richards Early Oop

    CBS Sports CBB @CBSSportsCBB

    Nick Richards with the OOP slam. https://t.co/1Agb5krj9H

  4. Johnson Says Hi to UT Fans 😝

    Matt Jones @KySportsRadio

    How Keldon Johnson said hello to Tennessee fans (@jdunnlex18) https://t.co/sX59ip2ZKF

  5. Who Ya Got in This Top-10 Rematch?

    NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    SEC showdown in Knoxville! 👀

    Who ya got? https://t.co/AntRNgXxgl

  6. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  7. Joe Rexrode @joerexrode

  8. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  9. Vols Try to Redeem Themselves in Rematch with Kentucky

    via All for Tennessee

  10. Students Camp Outside of Thompson-Boling Ahead of Game vs. UK

    via Knoxville News Sentinel

  11. PJ Washington Is Blocking Out the Noise Going into Rematch with UT

    via Kentucky Sports Radio

  12. Scott Charlton @Scott_Charlton

  13. Wes Rucker @wesrucker247

  14. Trey Wallace @TreyWallace_

  15. UK Drops UT Hype Tape 🔥

    Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

    Big game today. Fortunately, we know a thing or two about big games.

    Let’s. Go.

    #UKvsUT https://t.co/Ro6rAAXa7G

  16. Pair of Cats Continue Climb in Latest Mock Drafts

    via CatsPause

  17. Rick Barnes Talks Madness

    NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    Rick Barnes knows all about making the big dance.

    The @Vol_Hoops head coach sits down with @TheAndyKatz about the emotion of #MarchMadness! https://t.co/yIEcd278ss

  18. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  19. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  20. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  21. The Best TBT

    CBS Sports @CBSSports

    Flashback to the 2014 NCAA Tournament, when @KentuckyMBB’s Aaron Harrison could not stop hitting clutch shots. https://t.co/7m5t8CYF6M

  22. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  23. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  24. Wes Rucker @wesrucker247

  25. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  26. John Clay @johnclayiv

  27. Joe Rexrode @joerexrode

  28. Orange & White Report @OandWReport

  29. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  30. Tennessee Basketball @Vol_Hoops

  31. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  32. TheCatsPause247 @TheCatsPause247

  33. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  34. Trey Wallace @TreyWallace_

  35. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  36. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  37. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  38. TheCatsPause247 @TheCatsPause247

  39. Jon Hale @JonHale_CJ

  40. Bobby Reagan @BarstoolReags

  41. Jon Hale @JonHale_CJ

  42. Chris Fisher @ChrisFisher247

  43. Wes Rucker @wesrucker247

  44. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  45. Scott Charlton @Scott_Charlton

  46. Matt Jones @KySportsRadio

  47. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  48. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  49. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  50. Scott Charlton @Scott_Charlton

  51. David Sisk @CoachDavidSisk

  52. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  53. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  54. Jon Hale @JonHale_CJ

  55. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  56. @GrantRamey @GrantRamey

  57. Mike Wilson @ByMikeWilson

  58. Kentucky Basketball @KentuckyMBB

  59. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

  60. Kyle Tucker @KyleTucker_ATH

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Yazidis held captive by ISIL reunite with their families in Iraq

A group of Yazidi women and children are reunited with their families in Iraq after five years in captivity at the hands of ISIL group fighters.

They hug and kiss relatives in emotional scenes that underscored their years-long ordeal and that of their devastated community.

Elated families met their loved ones at a rural truck stop on the road between Sinjar and Dohuk on Saturday, tossing candy in the air like confetti, the women ululating with joy.

The 18 returning children, aged 10 to 15, appeared weary and at times uneasy with the attention of the media and officials.

One teenage boy collapsed in his aunt’s arms and broke down in tears. Few parents were there to receive their children – many are still missing in territory held by ISIL, or have been confirmed killed. Other parents have already sought asylum in Western nations, in the hopes their children will be able to follow them.

Still, the children could not hide their joy at being hugged and kissed once more by their relatives after the long and traumatic separation.

Iraq’s Yazidi projects face funding threat

They included 11 boys that many fear were trained in military camps run by ISIL, though they all denied it.

Only days since escaping the group, which is now on the brink of defeat, the children were struggling to come to terms with their ordeal.

“They treated us well,” said 13-year-old Milad Hussein Khalaf. He said the fighters separated him from his family when they were abducted in 2014 and sent the then-8-year-old to be raised by an ISIL family.

About 3,000 Yazidis are still missing after ISIL fighters stormed their communities in the Sinjar region in northwest Iraq in 2014, and enslaved, raped and killed thousands of worshippers of the esoteric faith. ISIL considers the Kurdish-speaking religious minority to be heretics.

‘They were all victims’

The group of 3 Yazidi women and 18 children who reunited with their families are among thousands of civilians who emerged in the last few days from the last speck of territory held by the ISIL in the village of Baghouz, in northeastern Syria.

They crossed into Iraq from Syria on Friday, and were picked up by their families on Saturday.

Khalaf’s older cousin, Siri Ali, used a video chat app on her phone so her sisters in Canada could see him arrive. She said Khalaf does not know that his parents are still missing.

“Thank God, they have returned and they are among us. This child does not have a mother or a father. We are going to be his parents,” said Khalaf’s other cousin, Noura Ali.

“We thank all the sides that worked together to rescue them, and we hope that the rest of the missing people will return.”

Nobel Peace Prize winners seek justice for war rape victims

Also among the arrivals was 10-year-old Dilbar Ali Ravu. He looked slightly stunned, but also could not hide his joy. His uncle, Jihad Ravu, said Dilbar developed lesions on his face while he was being held in a cell in Tal Afar in the early days of his captivity, after he was abducted five years ago.

He also says Dilbar has not received proper medical treatment since then.

Susan Fahmy, a coordinator for the NGO Khalsa Aid, said she is certain all the boys were sent to training and that they need years of rehabilitation.

She said some Yazidi boys have been caught communicating with ISIL a year after they returned, and also said women are being pressured to give up their children fathered by ISIL men.

Hosni Murad, the brother of Yazidi activist Nadia Murad, who received the Nobel Peace Prize for her advocacy on behalf of victims of wartime sexual violence, was there to welcome home his 10-year-old nephew, Khashman Samir.

Samir’s four siblings and his parents were all killed by ISIL group fighters, said Murad.

“They were all victims of Daesh,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for the group. “He’s the first and the last one to return from the family.”

Murad believes many young men are returning to the community harboring sympathies for the group.

“Yes, in truth, we’re afraid they’ll do something. Their mindset is Daesh. I mean it’s been five years they’ve been training with them,” he said.

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Trump claims his plea for Russia to hack Clinton’s email was a ‘joke’


Donald Trump

President Donald Trump speaks during the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Maryland, on March 2. | Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images

President Donald Trump on Saturday revisited his infamous 2016 appeal to Russia to hack Hillary Clinton’s emails, arguing that he was just joking and criticizing the press for taking his comments seriously.

“Because with the fake news, if you tell a joke, if you’re sarcastic, if you’re having fun with the audience…if you say something like, Russia, please if you can, get us Hillary Clinton’s emails. Please, Russia, please. Please, get us the emails, please,” Trump said during a speech at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland.

Story Continued Below

“So everybody is having a good time, I’m laughing, we’re all having fun. Then that fake CNN and others say, ‘He asked Russia to go get the emails. Horrible,’” Trump continued, adding, “These people are sick, and I’m telling you, they know the game and they play it dirty, dirtier than anybody has ever played the game.”

Trump is still under fire for his 2016 campaign plea to Russia in which he appeared to ask the foreign power to recover the emails from Clinton’s private email server when she was secretary of State.

“Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing,” Trump said in July 2016. “I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press.”

Prosecutors for special counsel Robert Mueller later said that Russian spies began trying to hack into Clinton’s server after Trump’s plea.

Trump’s rollicking, unscripted speech gave the president a chance to reconnect with his conservative base after a miserable week in which his much-touted summit with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un ended in failure and his former personal lawyer delivered explosive testimony to Congress.

“You know I’m totally off script right now,” Trump said at one point. “And this is how I got elected, by being off script.”

Trump delighted in the adoration of the crowd, pointing to onlookers and applauding as Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the U.S.A.” blared on the speakers. At one point, the president wrapped his arms around an American flag on the stage, mugging for the cameras as he held the hug for a moment.

The speech marked Trump’s third consecutive appearance as president at the gathering of conservative leaders.

Before Trump spoke, the television screens in the room played a contentious interview between American Conservative Union Chairman Matt Schlapp, the organizer of the conference, and CNN anchor Chris Cuomo. At one point, Cuomo said the president “lies all the time.” Schlapp shot back, “Not true.”

At one point, as the CPAC crowd looked on, CNN flashed a chyron that said, “Conservatives fail to call out Trump’s repeated lies.”

Schlapp later introduced the president, making a point to stress the crowd size at the event, a metric that the president obsesses over. “We’re so full that even our overflow rooms have overflow rooms,” Schlapp said.

“Even in the midst of nuclear diplomacy, Mr. President, we are happy that when you walked away, you walked here to be with us,” Schlapp added later.

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