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Gates Foundation, women’s tennis partnering on health issues

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Gates Foundation, women’s tennis partnering on health issues

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — All kinds of requests attain the Invoice and Melinda Gates Basis, by way of all kinds of strategies, however not often does a significant entreaty come by way of LinkedIn message. That, although, is how Micky Lawler, the president of the WTA ladies’s skilled tennis tour, first reached out to the group a couple of partnership throughout a sleepless pandemic evening.

Ultimately, the thought made its option to basis co-chair Melinda French Gates. The origin was uncommon. The considered working along with the game was interesting.

“I believed, ‘God, what higher?’ I imply, I’m all the time on the lookout for feminine ladies gender champions, as a result of I do know the distinction they make for younger ladies,” French Gates instructed The Related Press at Wimbledon on Friday, when she attended the Grand Slam event for the primary time. “I do know the distinction after they name on a authorities. I do know after they have a hyperlink to a primary girl in a rustic, one thing occurs.”

And so the WTA and the inspiration are going to work collectively to boost consciousness about — and cash for — ladies’s well being and vitamin all over the world. Additionally they will coordinate efforts to advertise gender equality and feminine management.

French Gates, Lawler and 10 former gamers, together with previous Wimbledon champions Billie Jean King and Marion Bartoli, took the primary concrete step towards that collaboration throughout a roundtable assembly for about an hour Friday on the All England Membership boardroom within the Centre Courtroom stadium.

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“We all know that these athletes are at high of their recreation. They’re function fashions, they’re leaders they usually can converse to those points as a result of they know them,” stated French Gates, who stated the inspiration has not beforehand partnered with a ladies’s sports activities league.

“I simply know place after place is healthier after we are transferring towards gender equality. There’s nowhere on this planet the place we but have it. However what I do know is that so many younger ladies look as much as feminine function fashions. And so who do they search for? They search for ladies in enterprise, they search for ladies in leisure, they search for ladies in sport,” she stated. “And so when this partnership began to return about, and Micky had this concept, she stated, ‘Who higher to know the significance of vitamin than our athletes, proper?’”

In August 2020, throughout the WTA’s first event after a COVID-19 hiatus, Lawler discovered herself unable to get some shut-eye in her Lexington, Kentucky, lodge room. Her issues: “Are we doing the correct factor? Are we coming again too quickly?”

She had been struck by seeing a Netflix documentary about Invoice Gates and, she stated Friday, “It was Melinda’s mind that I used to be very interested by.”

Lawler tried to hook up with the inspiration; her preliminary thought was turning into one thing actual she thinks present gamers will assist. Lawler deliberate to introduce French Gates to Wimbledon finalist Ons Jabeur — a 27-year-old from Tunisia who’s the primary African girl and first Arab girl to achieve a Grand Slam title match — on Friday afternoon.

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“We’re a worldwide group, and we’ve got so many passionate ladies who actually need to make an impression of their lifetime,” Lawler stated throughout a joint interview with French Gates. “It goes method past the greenback figures. We really feel that if we make large issues occur, the funding will come and can develop exponentially, as a result of our companions will need to be part of this.”

Requested for an instance of how present athletes probably might assist, French Gates talked about the Girls Ship Convention about gender equality in July 2023 at Kigali, Rwanda.

“We might have tennis gamers highlighting on their social media channels the significance of those ladies’s well being points, a few of them probably displaying up on stage to assist spotlight the problems,” she stated, “and calling on their very own governments, saying, ‘I need our authorities to step up and put extra money into’ regardless of the situation is — maternal mortality, reproductive well being.”

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Extra AP Wimbledon protection: https://apnews.com/hub/wimbledon and https://apnews.com/hub/tennis and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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Dehydrated coyote pup dies after it was rescued by California firefighters

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Dehydrated coyote pup dies after it was rescued by California firefighters

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A dehydrated coyote pup died Thursday after being rescued by California firefighters.

The coyote was about 6 weeks old, said Colleen Crowley, spokesperson for the Peninsula Humane Society & SPCA.

Photos of the July 4 rescue on social media show a big-eared pup bundled up and given bowls of food at a San Mateo County fire station.

The coyote was found in an unincorporated area of the county just south of San Francisco.

Firefighters with Cal Fire CZU had “seen this pup running around with his mom, but this time, mom was nowhere in sight. The little animal seemed disoriented and was stumbling around,” read the post accompanying photos.

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They gave the pup water and chicken until rescuers with the humane society could take the small coyote, who was dehydrated and malnourished.

Crowley said the pup could barely open its eyes.

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Ukraine's navy chief says Russian warships are leaving Crimean hub in Black Sea

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Ukraine's navy chief says Russian warships are leaving Crimean hub in Black Sea
  • The Russian navy’s Black Sea Fleet has been forced to rebase almost all of its combat-ready warships from occupied Crimea to other locations. 
  • Ukraine has dealt heavy blows to Russian forces in the Black Sea even as Russia has the upper hand on land.
  • Vice-Admiral Oleksiy Neizhpapa, Ukraine’s navy chief, said the expected delivery of U.S.-made F-16 fighter aircraft would allow Ukraine to challenge Russia’s “full dominance” of the skies over the Black Sea.

The Russian navy’s Black Sea Fleet has been forced to rebase nearly all its combat-ready warships from occupied Crimea to other locations, and its main naval hub is becoming ineffectual because of attacks by Kyiv, Ukraine’s navy chief said.

Vice-Admiral Oleksiy Neizhpapa said Ukrainian missile and naval drone strikes had caused heavy damage to the Sevastopol base, a logistics hub for repairs, maintenance, training and ammunition storage among other important functions for Russia.

“They were established over many decades, possibly centuries. And clearly they are now losing this hub,” Neizhpapa told Reuters in a rare interview in the port city of Odesa ahead of Ukraine Navy Day on Sunday.

UKRAINE’S ARMY RETREATS FROM POSITIONS IN STRATEGIC TOWN AS RUSSIAN TROOPS CLOSE IN

More than 28 months since Russia’s full-scale invasion, Kyiv has dealt a series of stinging blows to Moscow in the Black Sea although Ukrainian ground troops are on the back foot across a sprawling front.

Ukraine, which has no major warships at its disposal, has used uncrewed naval boats packed with explosives to target Russian vessels, and pounded the fleet’s facilities and other military targets on Crimea with Storm Shadow and ATACM missiles.

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“Almost all the main combat-ready ships have been moved by the enemy from the main base of the Black Sea Fleet, and the ships are kept in Novorossiisk, and some of them are kept in the Sea of Azov,” he said.

Commander of the Navy of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Vice Admiral Oleksiy Neizhpapa poses for a picture during an interview amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in Odesa, Ukraine, on June 25, 2024. (Reuters/Tom Balmforth)

Russia’s Novorossiisk naval base on its eastern Black Sea coast lacks the extensive facilities of Crimea’s Sevastopol, which served as the storage and loading site for cruise missiles used by its warships to launch air strikes on Ukraine, he said.

“I understand that they are now trying to solve this problem in Novorossiisk,” he said, describing this as a “main issue” for the fleet.

Russia’s defense ministry did not respond to a Reuters request for comment on Neizhpapa’s remarks.

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President Vladimir Putin told navy chiefs last month that Russia’s fleet had been replenished over recent years and that a major modernization was under way, including steps to “increase the combat stability of the fleet” and strengthen it.

Alongside strategic bombers and ground-based launchers, missile-carrying warships and submarines play an important role in Russia’s regular long-range missile attacks.

Neizhpapa said Ukraine had destroyed or damaged 27 naval vessels, including five that he said were destroyed by sea mines laid by Ukrainian naval drones near the Bay of Sevastopol.

Moscow seized and annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014. Before February 2022, Russia used its Black Sea Fleet, which consists of dozens of warships, to project power into the Mediterranean and the Middle East.

Throughout the Ukraine war, Turkey, which controls the straits in and out of the Black Sea, has not allowed warships to enter or exit.

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DEFENSIVE POSTURE

In a sign of their more defensive posture, some Russian warships that seldom entered the Sea of Azov to the east of Crimea are now stationed there regularly, Neizhpapa said.

Monitoring data compiled by the Ukrainian Navy and provided to Reuters showed that as of June 27, 10 Russian warships were stationed in the Sea of Azov compared with none in 2023.

The Black Sea Fleet is primarily used now for logistics, a small amount of coastal territorial control and for firing Kalibr cruise missiles at Ukraine, he said.

He declined to say what Ukraine’s future plans in the Black Sea would involve.

Ukraine’s operations in the Black Sea have allowed it to establish and secure its own shipping corridor without Russia’s blessing after Moscow pulled out of the wartime food export deal brokered by the United Nations last year.

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The pushback began with Ukrainian coastal defenses that allowed it to force naval vessels away. In April 2022, Ukrainian anti-ship missiles sank the Moskva, the flagship of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, in a humiliating blow for the Kremlin.

With the addition of naval drone attacks and strikes, Russian warships do not enter the northwestern part of the Black Sea over an area of almost 9,650 square miles, Neizhpapa said.

He said the delivery of U.S.-made F-16 fighter aircraft, expected to happen soon, would be a boost allowing it to challenge what he called Russia’s “full dominance” of the skies over the Black Sea.

“F-16s with the right armaments will be able to push away Russian warplanes. The northwestern part of the Black Sea, particularly the corridor for civilian ships, will be almost 100% secure,” he said.

He added that Ukraine would like to expand its shipping corridor, which currently only involves maritime traffic from three of the main Odesa ports, to include the ports of Mykolaiv and Kherson, but that it was not possible.

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He cited Russia’s control over the Kinburn Spit, which juts out along that route.

Civilian vessels are accompanied by patrol boats in some areas to help with protection against mines, and air defenses provided cover both to the ports and the corridors, he said.

The volume of cargo through the corridor has stabilized over the last six months, with Ukraine operating two daily convoys of vessels in comparison with one in 2023.

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Sudan’s army chief says many countries ‘turn a blind eye’ to RSF crimes

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Sudan’s army chief says many countries ‘turn a blind eye’ to RSF crimes

General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan tells Al Jazeera many countries remain silent over alleged RSF crimes in Sudan’s civil war.

Sudan army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan has said “many countries remain silent and turn a blind eye” to crimes allegedly committed by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the country’s more-than-year-long civil war.

Sudan has been gripped by war since April 2023, when fighting erupted between forces loyal to al-Burhan and the RSF led by his former deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

Since the war broke out, tens of thousands of people have been killed and millions more have been displaced as a humanitarian crisis has deepened.

Both sides have been accused of possibly committing war crimes by UN officials and rights groups.

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Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, left, and RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan ‘Hemedti’ Daglo [Ashraf Shazly/AFP]

In an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera in Port Sudan, al-Burhan said, “Many countries remain silent and turn a blind eye to the crimes being committed every day.”

“Every day, the enemies are killing the Sudanese people, plundering their land and raping their wives and daughters … Everyone who remains silent and those who support what the other side is doing daily is definitely an enemy,” al-Burhan said, without naming any country.

“Perhaps some countries have used their influence to stop aid provided to the Sudanese state. Some countries may have used their international and regional mechanisms to stop supporting the armed forces,” he added.

In March UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, said his team had documented dozens of cases of sexual violence.

“Sexual violence as a weapon of war, including rape, has been a defining – and despicable – characteristic of this crisis since the beginning,” he said.

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His team has documented 60 incidents of conflict-related sexual violence, involving at least 120 victims across the country, the vast majority women and girls, he said but added that “these figures are sadly a vast underrepresentation of the reality.”

“Men in RSF uniform and armed men affiliated with the RSF, were reported to be responsible for 81 percent of the documented incidents,” Turk said.

Paramilitary gains

The RSF has, in recent months, made several breakthroughs and is closing in on Port Sudan on the Red Sea, where the army, government and United Nations agencies are currently based.

When questioned about the RSF’s military gains, al-Burhan stated that “losses in battle or retreating in a certain situation does not mean losing the battle itself, and doesn’t mean defeat”, adding that “the Sudanese people and the Sudanese armed forces will never be defeated”.

In late June, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said that the war has left some 755,000 Sudanese facing “catastrophe”, the most severe level of extreme hunger, while 8.5 million people grapple with food shortages that could result in acute malnutrition and death.

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The United Nations hunger monitoring system recently warned of a realistic chance of famine in several areas of Sudan including parts of Darfur, Khartoum, Kordofan and Gezira states.

People fleeing the town of Singa, the capital of Sudan's southeastern Sennar state, arrive in Gedaref in the east of the war-torn country on July 1, 2024
People fleeing the town of Singa, the capital of Sudan’s southeastern Sennar state, arrive in Gadarif in the east of the war-torn country on July 1, 2024 [Photo by AFP]

When asked about the humanitarian situation, al-Burhan told Al Jazeera, “When we’re talking about famine, we must talk about its causes and about those responsible for it.”

“Sudan has vast areas of arable land, and Sudan has huge numbers of farmers who know how to work these lands; most of the arable land has been cultivated except for the lands where the Janjaweed terrorist groups threatened citizens and prevented them from cultivating,” he said.

The RSF was born out of the Popular Defence Forces militias, commonly known as Janjaweed, mobilised by Sudan’s former President Omar al-Bashir against non-Arab tribes in Darfur.

“In Sudan, we have shortages in some areas that are under the control of these rebels, but in the rest of the country, there are no shortages, except for areas where people have been displaced,” he said.

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