Sports
Players in Japan could push for free agency change, opening door for earlier moves to MLB
In late July, Tony Clark, the executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, visited Japan to announce support for players in the country’s top league, Nippon Professional Baseball. Japanese ballplayers are trying to take control of their name, image and likeness rights, or NIL — a fight familiar to college athletes in the United States. The NPB clubs hold those rights, and therefore, the final say over the endorsement deals players make.
But NIL is not the only battle underway for the Japan Professional Baseball Players Association. It may not even be the most ambitious. NPB players, who are not known for aggressive labor tactics, are pushing to become free agents earlier in their careers — including a change that would allow players to join Major League Baseball sooner.
To get it done, the JPBPA is preparing a legal challenge to the league’s reserve system on antitrust grounds. Tak Yamazaki, outside counsel to the Japan Professional Baseball Players Association, said he could not specify exactly when the action will be brought, but that it would be this year.
“It will happen soon,” Yamazaki said.
Players in Japan have two forms of free agency: domestic and international. Domestic free agency, the freedom to switch to another NPB team, is achieved after seven or eight years in the league, depending on whether the player was drafted out of college or high school.
But to leave as a free agent for a foreign league like MLB, the wait is nine years. Players can depart sooner, but only if their team posts them for bidding. Instead, NPB players want what’s in place in MLB: free agency after a blanket six years, regardless of entry or destination.
The two-pronged push for change is remarkable for a players’ association that does not have the same might as its U.S. counterpart. Club owners hold most of the power in NPB, in part because labor unions in Japan are generally not as strong as they are in the United States. Coincidentally, next month marks the 20th anniversary of the only strike NPB players have held in their history, a two-day effort to stave off club contraction.
A second NPB player strike does not appear to be in the offing any time soon. But the JPBPA regards the body that oversees antitrust law, Japan’s Fair Trade Commission, as perhaps the best vehicle to attack the reserve system. That’s a relatively new development: in 2019, the commission issued a report that gave the nation’s athletes newfound leverage.
“There was legal argument whether antitrust law is applied to sports matters,” Yamazaki said. “They changed the interpretation, making it clear that the antitrust law will apply. … That has changed the whole landscape.”
One smaller test case in front of the commission has already gone the JPBPA’s way, leading to the repeal of an unwritten rule in NPB in 2020. The “Tazawa Rule” was named for former big-league pitcher Junichi Tazawa, who had been effectively barred from playing in NPB at the end of his time playing in the U.S. because he had skipped NPB’s amateur draft to pursue a major-league career.
A person briefed on management’s thinking who was not authorized to speak publicly said NPB has been preparing for this next challenge, and that the league has proposed reducing the time to domestic free agency. The offer did not include a reduction with international free agency.
“Six and seven years was on the table at the end of January,” the person said. “If they were willing to negotiate several months ago, I think we would have been able to successfully come to an agreement before Opening Day.”
Yamazaki said the league’s offer was more complex than a straight reduction.
The other change NPB players seek, to their NIL rights, creates a contrast to the U.S., where NIL is a relatively settled matter in pro leagues. But it’s been a dominant topic in college athletics, reshaping the NCAA.
The JPBPA intends to continue to pursue player NIL rights via negotiation. Theoretically, though, the players could also take up an antitrust fight in that space, too. The topic is longstanding. The players sued over publicity rights on different grounds back in 2002, and years later, the case wound up in the Supreme Court of Japan, where the league prevailed.
But that was before 2019. An antitrust case in the U.S. was notably at the center of vast change of NIL for college athletes, when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the NCAA in 2021.
NPB teams take a cut of player endorsements, and the clubs are protective of their own sponsors.
“There will be a certain amount of commission, and also it is not absolutely free (choice),” Yamazaki said. “For example, if a company that is offering an endorsement deal to the player is a competitor of club sponsors, it can be denied. Also, for example, setting up a YouTube channel: some clubs allow it, but some clubs don’t.”
The person briefed on NPB management thinking contended that because the clubs have been successful in merchandising, the current setup allows players to maximize their income. Clark, meanwhile, believes players can unlock greater value in group licensing. International unions have “rarely, if at all … taken advantage of or realized the value of their name, image and likeness rights,” he said.
“We believe there’s a better opportunity on the heels of (Shohei) Ohtani coming here, and on the heels of nearly a third of our membership at the major-league level being international, to build on that in a way that hasn’t happened yet,” Clark continued.
The MLBPA is billing its involvement as a business opportunity, not just union camaraderie. When Clark traveled to the city of Sapporo last month, he announced that the MLBPA and a licensing business it owns about 20 percent of, OneTeam Partners, are going “to support Japanese players in reclaiming their NIL rights from Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) and to manage these rights in the future through the creation of a commercial program, run by OneTeam International,” per a memo the MLBPA sent to its players.
MLBPA head Tony Clark traveled to Japan to assist in union efforts there. (Daniel Shirey / MLB Photos via Getty Images)
The JPBPA became a union in 1985. That’s almost two decades after the MLBPA created a group licensing program in 1966. Big leaguers at the time quickly began a boycott of Topps, in effort to force the trading card company to deal with the players en masse.
Today, that licensing program brings in huge dollars for players and the union. A financial statement the MLBPA filed with the Department of Labor lists $152 million in net licensing royalties for 2023, although that figure doesn’t account for every stream.
The work requires enforcement. Just last week, the PA’s business arm sued the Pittsburgh Pirates and the gas station chain Sheetz for alleged unlicensed use of player images. A settlement has been tentatively agreed to. But the income has ripple effects: the funds help players prepare for work stoppages, creating bargaining leverage.
Clark acknowledged the MLBPA’s support for the Japanese players comes with costs to players stateside, but said players will benefit stateside as well.
“Someone may look at it from the outside in and suggest, ‘OK, well, that really doesn’t affect me,’ but the truth is, the global sports community is more connected than people think,” Clark said. “Yes, there is a financial investment. Yes, there is a sweat equity component of this.”
Per the MLBPA memo, OneTeam’s international division, which was started this year, is also in partnership talks with football and soccer unions across England, Italy, France, as well as the International Rugby Players Association and various unions across Australia and New Zealand. The memo did not touch, however, the JPBPA’s reserve-system battle — an omission perhaps made out of sensitivity to another union’s bargaining positions.
Cultural chasms
When the MLBPA started its group licensing program, the union was run by the late Marvin Miller, an economist who rose to prominence with the steelworkers and built the PA into a titan. Miller’s son, Peter, is a longtime resident of Japan who served as a consultant to the MLBPA in Japan from 1994 to 2011.
Peter Miller said the relationship between players and owners in his time was “very different from the adversarial relationship that is considered essential in U.S labor-management relations.”
“For example, when they called a strike, they expressed remorse to the fans,” Miller said. “Because it was just really not part of the culture at all.”
Yet, at the same time, the JPBPA has also stood out amongst unions in the country according to Matt Nichol, a lecturer who studies sports law and labor in the College of Business at Central Queensland University in Australia.
“Even though the Japanese players’ union doesn’t have the strike history that the MLBPA does, and there wasn’t that period of industrial action from the formation of the MLBPA through to the strike in 1994, for Japan, the Players Association is quite a militant union,” Nichol said. “Litigating over NIL … taking on the league when they tried to reduce the teams from 12 to 10. Those actions by the Players Association are quite important, and quite dramatic in the context of Japanese labor relations. So the JPBPA is becoming more assertive.”
The differences between the two countries’ systems are vast. For example: There is no set term for the collective bargaining agreement in NPB, creating a rolling nature of negotiations, as opposed to the five-year terms MLB players and owners agree to. NPB players also don’t always explore free agency, even when eligible.
“Players, when they become free agents, don’t always change teams, so there’s not a huge free-agent market like in the U.S.,” Nichol said. “In the last 10, 15 years, players have been moving domestically a little bit more with free agency, but it’s nothing like the U.S.”
In some ways, NPB operates “probably a bit fairer system” than what’s in place in MLB, according to Nichol, who noted teams rarely release players midseason. NPB also has a smaller gap between the highest and lowest paid players and has long provided housing accommodations to minor leaguers — a contrast to the U.S., where minor leaguers took up a public fight for housing in recent years.
The person briefed on NPB management’s thinking made similar points, and argued it was folly to compare the reserve systems in the two countries.
“We only have one minor-league level,” the person said. “If you sign out of college, on average, you will make it (to the major-league level) in less than two years. That, plus seven years, means about nine years.
“But in Major League Baseball, in America’s case, you have to spend about an average of four years in the minors. Plus six years free agency. So, 10 years. Although it’s a long reserve system, you would spend less number of years at the minor-league level in Japan.”
NPB players today sometimes do leave for the U.S. sooner than nine years, but only when their club chooses to post them for bidding. And the best players bring NPB teams hefty payments. The Los Angeles Dodgers, for example, paid the Orix Buffaloes $50.6 million to sign Yoshinobu Yamamoto last offseason, on top of the $325 million the Dodgers committed to the pitcher in salary over 12 years.
The posting agreement — which determines that club-to-club fee structure — is technically separate from the reserve system. But, if the NPB reserve system changes, there’s a clause allowing the posting agreement to be changed. The posting agreement is actually a deal amongst three parties: MLB, MLBPA and NPB. The players in Japan are not formally a party, but Yamazaki said the MLPBA has well represented their interests.
Former MLB pitcher Junichi Tazawa’s case helped set a precedent for player movement in Japan. (Chris Covatta / Getty Images)
More than the number of years to free agency, what might be most pressing to NPB players is who decides it. The MLBPA toppled club control over the reserve system in the 1970s.
“Our reserve system, just like back in pre-1976 MLB, has been unilaterally imposed by the clubs,” Yamazaki said. “That’s the biggest difference between the MLBPA and the JPBPA.”
Working in the JPBPA’s favor could be the success it has had in front of Japan’s antitrust administration already.
The Tazawa Rule forbade a player who skips the league’s amateur draft from joining NPB until at least two years following the conclusion of his career abroad. It was intended to deter players from bolting for MLB. Tazawa made 388 appearances in MLB from 2009-18, mostly for the Boston Red Sox, but he could not play in NPB once returning home.
In 2020, the JFTC found the NPB had likely violated the law. NPB repealed the rule during the investigation, so no discipline was issued. Now, the JPBPA could try to repeat that playbook: using the complaint to pressure change.
Money on the table?
Shohei Ohtani’s global sponsorship portfolio, like his dual talent as a pitcher and hitter, is unique. For the general player population in Japan, there’s a question of how robust a market they would find if they do take over their NIL.
Josh Persell, who runs JP Sports Advisors, an agency that specializes in bringing players from NPB to MLB and vice versa, said that the endorsement rules in the nation limit what players can do, but only to an extent.
“The licensing landscape is far different than it is here. It’s a smaller country, there are less brands, companies, and categories participating,” said Persell. “The league does well with their general marketing campaigns, but it’s on a smaller economic scale. Is there a broader licensing play which rises the tide and benefits the league, the owners and the players?”
An executive who brokers endorsements for NPB players said the league’s top players make only $150,000 in endorsements annually. But, the executive believes more opportunities could open if clubs relinquished the rights.
“Yes it’s cheap,” said the executive, who was granted anonymity because of the sensitivity of the business dealings, “but that’s what it is.”
A second marketing executive, one who arranges sponsorships for MLB players, said consistently good players in the States make at least double, adding that one or two players per team might reach seven figures.
Peter Miller said the licensing rights have long been desired by Japanese players.
“The Japanese baseball clubs are all potentially advertising entities,” Miller said. “It’s expected that the Yomiuri Giants will support all the Yomiuri newspapers and be identified in pictures and with their uniforms and everything. When you look at it in that way, it’s a little bit hard to imagine an owner wrapping his mind around the idea of a player having his own image rights.
“From a Japanese point of view, it just doesn’t compute.”
Between the two pursuits, Yamazaki thinks NPB players have arrived at a crucial moment.
“Absolutely,” he said. “The biggest ones came at the same time.”
Although Yamazaki declined to reveal exactly when the JPBPA plans to file its challenge to the reserve system, he did share the timing of a different event: the union will celebrate the 20th anniversary of the two-day strike in December.
(Top photo of Yomiuri Giants players celebrating a win earlier this year: Kyodo via AP Images)
Sports
Jon Jones requests UFC release after Dana White says legend was ‘never’ considered him for White House card
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Mixed martial arts legend Jon Jones ended his retirement from UFC simply because he wanted a spot on the “Freedom 250” fight card at the White House in June.
But, when UFC CEO Dana White announced the card during UFC 326 this past weekend, Jones wasn’t among the fighters. As a result, he has requested a release from his UFC contract.
White was candid when asked about Jones following the UFC 326 card.
Jon Jones of the United States of America reacts after his TKO victory against Stipe Miocic of the United States of America in the UFC heavyweight championship fight during the UFC 309 event at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 16, 2024 in New York City. ((Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images))
“Never, ever, ever, which I told you guys a hundred thousands times, was Jon Jones ever even remotely in my mind to fight at the White House,” White explained, per CBS Sports. “Some guy with Meta Glasses filmed him talking about his hips – that his hips are so bad. And I don’t know if you guys saw that flag football game where he can barely run. Jon Jones retired because of his hips. He’s got arthritis in his hips. Apparently, doctors say he should have a hip replacement.”
White added that “the Jon Jones thing is bulls—,” saying that he texted the fighter’s lawyer saying he would never be on the White House card despite Jones saying he was in negotiations for it.
UFC ANNOUNCES CARD FOR WHITE HOUSE EVENT
The Meta Glasses incident White is referring to came from a viral video, where Jones, unaware he was being filmed, discussed issues with his hips to a fan.
On Monday, Jones composed a thorough response to White’s comments about him and the White House Card. He previously posted and deleted social media explanations, but Monday’s appeared to be his final statement on the matter.
UFC President Dana White speaks after UFC Fight Night at Toyota Center on Feb. 21, 2026. (Troy Taormina/Imagn Images)
“Yes, I have arthritis in my hip and it’s painful, but that doesn’t mean I can’t fight,” Jones, who retired a heavyweight champion in 2025, said. “So let me get this straight, if I had accepted the lowball offer, suddenly my hip would be fine and I’d be on the White House card? That doesn’t make sense. I even received stem cell treatment last week to get ready for the White House card, and training camp was scheduled to start today. I was preparing to be ready.
“I understand business deals fall through sometimes, but going out publicly and saying things that aren’t true isn’t right. After everything I’ve given to the UFC, the years, the title defenses, the fights, hearing that I’m ‘done’ is disappointing. Especially when as recently as Friday UFC was calling me trying to get me on that White House card for a much lower number.”
Jones finished his statement by saying he “respectfully” asks to be released from his UFC contract.
Jon Jones enters the ring before facing Stipe Miocic in the UFC heavyweight championship fight during the UFC 309 event at Madison Square Garden on November 16, 2024 in New York City, New York. (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
“No more spins, no more games. Thank you to the real fans who know what’s up,” he wrote.
The UFC did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Fox News Digital.
Jones is considered one of the best UFC fighters of all time, owning a 28-1-1 record, which includes his last bout with Stipe Miocic, knocking him out to take the heavyweight title belt. He is also a two-time light heavyweight champion.
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Sports
With U.S. at war with Iran, political upheaval could engulf World Cup
Twelve days ago the U.S., a World Cup host country, launched a full-scale bombing campaign against Iran, a country that has qualified to play in the tournament. That’s never happened before.
Five days later, that same World Cup host began military operations inside the borders of Ecuador, another World Cup qualifier, half a world away. That’s never happened before either.
With the tournament scheduled to kick off in three months, those events have soccer scholar Jonathan Wilson questioning whether it’s wise for the World Cup to go on at all.
“It seems to me, for each passing day, it’s less and less likely that the World Cup can happen,” he said.
That take seems unduly alarmist said David Goldblatt, a British sportswriter and sociologist who is a visiting professor at Pitzer College in Claremont. Anything short of a full-scale war inside the U.S. would not be enough to pull the plug on the tournament now, he said. Especially with FIFA expecting revenues of as much as $11 billion.
“I mean, it’s not a good look,” Goldblatt conceded. “And certainly when set against FIFA’s official pronouncements on its role in encouraging world peace and cosmopolitan celebrations of a universal humanity, none of that sits terribly easily.
“But in terms of actually running the World Cup, I don’t think it’s going to make very much difference at all.”
However, with the Trump administration open to engaging in more international conflicts, there’s little doubt this World Cup, the largest and most complex in history, will also be the most political in history as well.
Complicating things further is the fact the current conflict in the Middle East hasn’t been limited to just the U.S. and Iran. Iranian missiles have hit both Qatar and Saudi Arabia, among other countries, and Jordan has fired on U.S. assets.
Those three countries are World Cup qualifiers as well.
The fate of a soccer tournament pales in importance to the death and destruction the conflagration in the Middle East has produced, of course. But the need for unity is the very reason there’s a World Cup in the first place.
When French soccer administrator Jules Rimet founded the tournament 96 years ago, he believed soccer could be a tool for international peace. And in the early years of the tournament, Rimet, FIFA’s longest-serving president and a talented diplomat, was able to limit the impact of geopolitics on the World Cup, watering down Mussolini’s influence on the 1934 World Cup, for example, and steering the 1938 tournament away from Hitler’s Germany.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino has taken a far different approach, courting President Donald Trump’s support despite his growing number of global conflicts.
A week before bombs began falling on Iran, Infantino appeared at the inaugural meeting of Trump’s Board of Peace wearing a red cap with ‘USA’ on the front and the numbers ‘45-47’ — a reference to Trump’s non-consecutive presidencies. That act was so blatantly partisan, IOC president Kirsty Coventry said her organization would investigate whether Infantino, an IOC member, breached the terms of the group’s charter, which requires members to act independent of political interests.
FIFA president Gianni Infantino holds up a USA hat as he attends the inaugural meeting for the Board of Peace at the Institute of Peace in Washington on Feb. 19.
(Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)
“Infantino has absolutely breached every FIFA protocol on neutrality,” said Wilson, author of “The Power and Glory: The History of the World Cup.”
“Absolute neutrality is always impossible and not desirable, but it has clearly gone way, way, way beyond. The peace prize looked grotesque at the time. It looks even worse now. And I can’t see how the future will look kindly on Infantino. I think Infantino has to some extent legitimized Trump.”
This is hardly new behavior from Infantino, who had close relationships with Vladimir Putin ahead of the 2018 tournament played in Russia and Qatar’s leaders ahead of the 2022 tournament despite their well-known human rights violations.
The list of countries Infantino is asking to overlook poor relations with the country hosting the majority of World Cup games this summer is growing.
Consider that Denmark, which administers Greenland, an autonomous territory Trump has also threatened to invade, can qualify for the tournament in a European playoff that will take place later this month. Then there’s World Cup qualifiers Haiti, Ivory Coast and Senegal, who aren’t at war with the U.S. but whose citizens have been banned from entering the country to cheer for their teams. That completely contradicts a promise from Infantino, who said “everybody will be welcome” at the 2026 World Cup.
“If I had a crystal ball I could tell you now what is going to happen,” Heimo Schirgi, the World Cup chief operating officer for FIFA, said Monday. “But obviously the situation is developing. It’s changing day by day and we are monitoring closely. [But] the World Cup will go on right? The World Cup is too big and we hope that everyone can participate that has qualified.”
Goldblatt, the Pitzer professor, said Infantino’s action are understandable since he has few cards to play against Trump.
President Trump speaks as he receives the FIFA Peace Prize as FIFA president Gianni Infantino applauds on Dec. 5 the Kennedy Center in Washington.
(Patrick Smith / Getty Images)
“What’s Infantino going to do? What levers can you pull?” he asked. “You can threaten to take it away. That’s not happening. Moral admonishment? Who’s going to take that from FIFA? It is a farcical idea that anybody thinks that the president of FIFA has any kind of collective moral authority or any role as a spokesperson for the progressive part of the world.
“They may fantasize that this is the case. But it is morally and politically absurd that any of us should expect that of these people. So if you are Infantino and that is the case, you know what works with Trump? What works is flattery. So of course he’s gone down that path.”
The games, Goldblatt said, will go on even if bombs are still falling. And that may not be an entirely bad thing.
“Football’s a great distraction. That’s partly why it’s so popular,” he said. “It will be virtually impossible, if the war continues, for that not to be a central element of like, the meaning and the purpose of what we’re all doing here.
“How we’ll feel and what it will look like, I don’t know. It will be very strange. Football is unpredictable and extraordinary. Something will happen that will warm our souls.”
⚽ You have read the latest installment of On Soccer with Kevin Baxter. The weekly column takes you behind the scenes and shines a spotlight on unique stories. Listen to Baxter on this week’s episode of the “Corner of the Galaxy” podcast.
Sports
Australia grants asylum to 5 Iranian women’s soccer players amid Iran conflict
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Australia granted asylum to five players from the Iranian women’s soccer team who were visiting for a tournament when the U.S.-Israeli attacks against Iran began.
Australian federal police officers on Tuesday transported the five women from their hotel in Gold Coast, Australia, to a “safe location” after they made asylum requests to meet with Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke and to finalize the processing of their humanitarian visas.
“Last night I was able to tell five women from the Iranian Women’s Soccer team that they are welcome to stay in Australia, to be safe and have a home here,” Burke said on X.
The move comes after the team refused to sing the Iranian anthem before their first Women’s Asian Cup match early last week against South Korea, although they later sang and saluted the anthem in two subsequent matches, including ahead of their final match, when they were eliminated by the Philippines.
IRANIAN WOMEN’S SOCCER FANS SHOW SUPPORT FOR TRUMP AS TEAM APPEARS TO PIVOT ON NATIONAL ANTHEM STANCE
Australian Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke poses with five Iranian women soccer players who have been granted asylum in Australia, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (Australia Ministry of Home Affairs)
“I don’t want to begin to imagine how difficult that decision is for each of the individual women, but certainly last night it was joy, it was relief,” Burke told reporters after signing the documents. “People were very excited about embarking on a life in Australia.”
The five women said they were happy for their names and pictures to be published, according to Burke, who emphasized that the players wanted to make clear that they were not political activists.
The Iranian team arrived in Australia for the tournament before the war against Iran began on Feb. 28.
After the team was eliminated from the tournament over the weekend, they faced potentially returning to a country still under bombardment. The team’s head coach, Marziyeh Jafari, said on Sunday the players “want to come back to Iran as soon as we can.”
An official squad list named 26 players, as well as Jafari and other coaches.
While only five players were granted asylum, Burke said the offer was given to everyone on the team.
IRAN FLAG REMOVED FROM PARALYMPICS OPENING CEREMONY AFTER SOLE ATHLETE WITHDRAWS OVER TRAVEL SAFETY CONCERNS
Iran players during their national anthem ahead of the Women’s Asian Cup soccer match between Iran and the Philippines in Robina, Australia, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (Dave Hunt/AAPImage via AP)
“These women are tremendously popular in Australia, but we realize they are in a terribly difficult situation with the decisions that they’re making,” Burke said. “The opportunity will continue to be there for them to talk to Australian officials if they wish to.”
It remains unclear when the remaining players will leave Australia.
“Australians have been moved by the plight of these brave women,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters. “They’re safe here and they should feel at home here.”
“They then had to consider that and do it in a way that did not present any danger to them or to their families and friends back home in Iran,” he continued.
The asylum offer came after U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday called on Australia to grant asylum to any team member who wanted it.
Trump had blasted Australia on social media, saying Australia was “making a terrible humanitarian mistake” by allowing the team to be “forced back to Iran, where they will most likely be killed.”
Supporters react towards a bus transporting Iranian woman players following their Women’s Asian Cup soccer match against the Philippines on the Gold Coast, Australia, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (Dave Hunt/AAP Image via AP)
“The U.S. will take them if you won’t,” Trump said, despite his administration’s efforts to limit the number of immigrants in the U.S. who can receive asylum for political purposes.
Just hours later, Trump praised Albanese in another post.
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“He’s on it! Five have already been taken care of, and the rest are on their way,” Trump wrote.
Albanese said Trump had called him for “a very positive conversation,” about the issue. The prime minister said he explained “the action that we’d undertaken over the previous 48 hours” to support the women.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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