World
Finau wins 3M Open by 3 with late surge, Piercy collapse
BLAINE, Minn. (AP) — Tony Finau shot a 4-under 67 to win the 3M Open by three strokes Sunday, erasing a five-stroke deficit with 11 holes left as Scott Piercy tumbled out of the lead down the stretch at windy TPC Twin Cities.
Piercy adopted his tournament-record 54-hole rating with a wince-inducing 76 to tie for fourth, 4 strokes again.
Finau completed at 17-under 267. Sungjae Im (68) and Emiliano Grillo (71) tied for second place. James Hahn surged up the board with a 65 to match Piercy and Tom Hoge (70) at 13 underneath.
Piercy bogeyed 4 of six holes earlier than a triple-bogey implosion on No. 14, permitting Finau — taking part in within the previous trio — to take over for good on his option to his third profession tour victory.
Finau made a 31-foot putt for birdie on the fifteenth inexperienced to strengthen his grip on the lead, because the 6-foot-4 Utah participant calmly and confidently walked the TPC Twin Cities course in his white hat and aqua-striped polo.
The surest signal this was Finau’s day got here on No. 17. His tee shot clanged off the aspect of the grandstand, ricocheted again onto the inexperienced and rolled into the tough — just some toes from the water. He landed the proper chip inside a foot of the opening to make the par 3, then smiled barely as he playfully clamped his hand on his chest as if to fake the sequence gave him coronary heart bother.
On the daunting par-5 18th, Finau discovered the water off the tee to face one last problem. After the penalty stroke, his restoration photographs had been spot on. With Piercy trying on from the green, Finau made a 3-footer for bogey to seal it. He pumped his fist a number of instances, took off his cap and walked off to embrace his household.
Finau, who tied for third on the 3M Open in 2020, jumped from thirtieth to seventeenth within the FedEx Cup race. He entered the week ranked seventeenth on the planet.
Piercy shared the first-round lead with Im on Thursday after a 65 and pulled away from the pack Friday with a 64 to take a three-shot edge into the weekend.
The 43-year-old from Las Vegas, who nonetheless makes his native metropolis his dwelling base, stretched his result in 4 strokes after enduring the 6 1/2-hour delay Saturday to let the rain and lightning play via. His foot bothered him a lot he began taking his proper shoe off after every swing and strolling in his sock to the the subsequent lie.
That was nothing in comparison with the grind he discovered himself in Sunday. He was at 20-under after six holes. Lower than an hour later, Piercy was in bother. After posting solely three bogeys on his first 61 holes, he went over par on seven of his final 11. That included the 7 he turned in on No. 14.
Piercy’s tee shot landed within the fairway bunker, and his sand wedge didn’t get him out of the sand. With a dangerous, last-ditch strategy to get again on observe, his subsequent strive from the bunker splashed within the water quick and left of the inexperienced — as a substitute of a safer play to the precise. After the drop, Piercy hit into the tough. Then his subsequent try stopped 3 inches wanting the cup.
Grillo, the Argentine who tied for second on the John Deere Traditional three weeks in the past, additionally had a triple bogey that loomed massive ultimately, a 7 on No. 7.
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Extra AP golf protection: https://apnews.com/hub/golf and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
World
Imprisoned Kremlin critic convicted again, receives 3-year sentence for opposing war in Ukraine
Imprisoned Kremlin critic Alexei Gorinov was convicted again on Friday and given a three-year prison sentence for opposing Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine.
The three-day trial against Gorinov again revealed Russian intolerance of dissent.
Gorinov, 63, is a former member of a Moscow municipal council who is already serving a seven-year prison term for public criticism of the invasion, according to The Associated Press.
Noting his previous conviction and sentence, a court in Russia’s Vladimir region ordered Gorinov to serve a total of five years in a maximum-security prison. Russia’s independent news site Mediazona quoted Gorinov’s lawyer, who said the new sentence means he will spend a year more behind bars compared to his previous sentence.
Gorinov was first convicted in July 2022, when a Moscow court sentenced him to seven years in prison for “spreading false information” about the Russian army at a municipal council meeting. Gorinov was accused of expressing skepticism about a children’s art competition in his constituency and saying that “every day children are dying” in Ukraine.
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He was the first known Russian imprisoned under a 2022 law that essentially bans any public statements about the war that deviate from Moscow’s narrative.
In March 2023, Gorinov told The Associated Press from behind bars that “authorities needed an example they could showcase to others (of) an ordinary person, rather than a public figure.”
Last year, authorities launched a second case against Gorinov, his supporters said. He was purported to have been “justifying terrorism” in conversations with his cellmates about Ukraine’s Azov battalion, which Russia outlawed as a terrorist organization, and the 2022 explosion on the Crimean bridge, which Moscow considered an act of terrorism.
Gorinov rejected the allegations against him Wednesday, according to independent news site Mediazona, which quoted him as saying that he only said the annexed Crimean Peninsula was Ukrainian territory and that he called Azov a part of the Ukrainian army.
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His trial began Wednesday in the Vladimir region, where he is serving time in prison from his previous conviction. Photos from the courtroom, published by Mediazona, showed Gorinov in the defendant’s cage with a hand-drawn peace symbol on a piece of paper covering his prison badge and holding a handwritten placard saying: “Stop killing. Let’s stop the war.”
“My guilt is that I, as a citizen of my country, allowed this war to happen and could not stop it,” Gorinov said in his closing statement in court, Mediazona reported.
“But I would like my guilt and responsibility to be shared with me by the organizers, participants, supporters of the war, as well as the persecutors of those who advocate peace,” Gorinov added. “I continue to live with the hope that this will happen someday. In the meantime, I ask those who live in Ukraine and my fellow citizens who suffered from the war to forgive me.”
About 1,100 people have been the subjects of criminal cases over their anti-war stance since the war against Ukraine began in February 2022, according to OVD-Info, a prominent rights group that tracks political arrests. Nearly 350 of them are currently behind bars or have been involuntarily committed to medical institutions.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
Ukrainian men face sexual torture in Russian detention centres: UN
Sexual violence against Ukrainian men in Russian detention is significantly underreported due to the “stigma and perceived emasculation” attached to the crime, a United Nations agency has warned.
The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) says the official Ukrainian figure of 114 men who have been subjected to sexual violence since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022 is likely an underestimate.
Ukraine’s Prosecutor General’s Office recorded those cases, as well as those of 202 female survivors.
The UNFPA says it is likely that for each incident that was recorded, there were a further 10 to 20 cases that went unreported.
In September, the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine, which was established by the UN Human Rights Council in March 2022, revealed the systematic use of sexual violence as a method of torture, often targeting men, in detention centres by Russian authorities.
The findings of its investigation included detailed testimonies from inside detention centres in the occupied areas of Ukraine and Russia, with reports that higher-ranking Russian personnel “ordered, tolerated, or took no action” against such treatment.
Men in detention face sexual torture
The UNFPA told Al Jazeera that although the vast majority of victims of this crime were women and girls, this kind of violence was also commonly used against men, boys and people of diverse gender identities.
All survivors of conflict-related sexual violence face significant barriers when seeking support, Massimo Diana, the UNFPA Ukraine representative, told Al Jazeera.
This can include structural barriers such as limited resources and systems still being developed during the ongoing war but also others that are “deeply personal, rooted in stigma, shame, and fear”, Diana said.
“For male survivors, these barriers are often compounded by concerns about being labelled or misunderstood, including fears of being associated with sexual minorities,” he said.
Mental health professionals working with a UNFPA-supported centre for survivors in Ukraine, which provides free, confidential services to communities along the front line, say many victims are burdened with a sense of shame after being abused.
Psychologists have also faced challenges in building trust and securing the anonymity of survivors when digital tools are used to amplify footage and photographs of sexual torture.
The UNFPA, citing psychologists working with victims, has reported that Russian forces have sent videos of male Ukrainian detainees being raped to their relatives for blackmail or simply to humiliate them.
In July, Oleksandra Matviichuk and her Nobel Prize-winning Centre for Civil Liberties, a Kyiv-based human rights group, told Al Jazeera that in interviews with hundreds of survivors of Russian captivity, many had told her and her colleagues that they had been beaten, raped and electrocuted.
Sexual violence and armed conflict
In recent years, the world has seen heightened levels of conflict-related sexual violence fuelled by armed conflict, according to the UN.
Al Jazeera has reported on the use of rape as a weapon in the ongoing war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and its rival, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which erupted in April 2023.
In March, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk said rape had been used as “a defining – and despicable – characteristic of this crisis since the beginning”.
There have also been reports of rape against male Palestinian prisoners in Israel.
In August, a video emerged of a gang rape of a Palestinian prisoner by guards at the Sde Teiman detention facility in the Negev desert, southern Israel.
In November, UN Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian Territories Francesca Albanese said Dr Adnan al-Bursh, one of Gaza’s most prominent doctors, was “likely raped to death” in Israeli detention.
World
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