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The US guide to World Cup 2022 in Qatar

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The US guide to World Cup 2022 in Qatar

Washington, DC – The world’s prime soccer occasion has formally kicked off and World Cup fever is spreading throughout the globe, together with in america, whose males’s nationwide workforce (USMNT) is collaborating within the event for the primary time since 2014.

Many bars and eating places throughout america are flying the flags of all 32 international locations taking part in in Qatar in a show that resembles a celebration of the United Nations.

And because the US squad prepares to take the World Cup 2022 discipline for the primary time on Monday at Qatar’s Al Rayyan Stadium, pleasure is already constructing for the 2026 World Cup that might be cohosted by the US, Canada and Mexico.

Right here, Al Jazeera seems on the World Cup from a US lens, answering some key questions concerning the occasion.

What occasions are the video games being performed?

Like different worldwide occasions held exterior the Americas, World Cup video games might be taking place at unconventional occasions for US viewers.

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Over the subsequent 4 weeks, matches will start at 5 separate occasions, between 10:00 and 19:00 GMT.

On the US East and West Coasts, which means: 5am Japanese Time (2am Pacific Time); 8am Japanese Time (5am Pacific Time); 10am Japanese Time (7am Pacific Time); 11am Japanese Time (8am Pacific Time) and 2pm Japanese Time (11am Pacific Time).

The ultimate will happen on Sunday, December 18 at 15:00 GMT, which suggests 10am Japanese Time (7am Pacific Time).

When is the USMNT taking part in?

Luckily for American followers, all three USMNT video games within the group stage will happen at 19:00 GMT (2pm Japanese Time, 11am Pacific Time). So no must set alarms or try to remain as much as be awake at daybreak. An prolonged lunch break will do.

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US gamers will kick off their marketing campaign in opposition to Wales on Monday, then face off in opposition to England on Friday, to finish their group stage journey in a extremely anticipated sport in opposition to Iran on November 25.

If the USMNT progresses to the knockout levels, the place it finishes in Group B will decide the schedule of its subsequent matches.

What channels are broadcasting the video games?

Video games might be performed with English commentary both on Fox or its affiliate, FS1.

NBCUniversal-owned Telemundo will air the video games with Spanish commentary. Some video games can even be on the Spanish-language channel Universo.

How can US-based viewers stream video games?

Don’t fear, you’ve gotten many attainable streaming choices.

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NBC’s Peacock streaming app consists of Telemundo, which is airing the entire video games. Fox and FS1 are additionally accessible on a number of streaming platforms, together with YouTube TV, Hulu+ Reside TV and FuboTV. A few of these providers supply a free trial, however most require a paid subscription or an accompanying cable subscription.

The place are the large watch events taking place?

Cities throughout the US can have public watch events, and a few are even altering laws to accommodate the event.

With the game rising in recognition, soccer bars now dot the maps of main cities within the US. Common sports activities bars are additionally more likely to modify their schedules and broadcast the video games.

Within the nation’s capital, Washington, DC, the town council handed an emergency measure to permit qualifying institutions to open 24/7 for the World Cup. Particular permits can even let bars serve alcohol all through the day and evening, besides between 4am and 6am.

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In Washington, DC, the opening US sport in opposition to Wales might be broadcast at a park in Dupont Circle within the coronary heart of the town. The Welsh embassy is co-sponsoring the occasion, and organisers will hand parody medical notes diagnosing attendees with “futbol fever” to permit them to skip college or work.

In the meantime, American Outlaws, a fan group that helps the US males’s and ladies’s soccer groups, might be organising watch events at its chapters all through the nation.

Some Main League Soccer (MLS) groups are additionally internet hosting their very own watch events and welcoming followers to hitch. The Seattle Sounders might be broadcasting Monday’s sport on the Armory at Seattle Heart. The LA Galaxy can be organising occasions at a number of places in Los Angeles.

Each West Coast cities are set to host video games within the 2026 World Cup.

Will US officers attend video games?

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, who’s already in Qatar for bilateral talks, will watch the USMNT tackle Wales on the Al-Rayyan Stadium on Monday, the State Division mentioned.

Historically, heads of states of countries that make it to the ultimate attend the showcase sport. Whereas it might require some rescheduling work on the White Home, many US followers could also be hoping that President Joe Biden will make a visit to Doha subsequent month.

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Trump Hush Money Prosecutors Seek to Ask About Fraud, E. Jean Carroll

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Trump Hush Money Prosecutors Seek to Ask About Fraud, E. Jean Carroll
By Luc Cohen NEW YORK (Reuters) – Prosecutors on Donald Trump’s criminal hush money trial want to ask the former U.S. president about civil cases in which he was found liable for sexual abuse and fraud if he chooses to testify, according to a document made public on Wednesday. It will be up to …
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French police evict hundreds from abandoned Paris warehouse ahead of Olympics

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French police evict hundreds from abandoned Paris warehouse ahead of Olympics

PARIS (AP) — With the Paris Olympic Games 100 days away, police carried out a large-scale eviction at France’s biggest squat in the south of the country’s capital. Authorities, including dozens of gendarmes, cleared out the makeshift camp at an abandoned bus company headquarters in Vitry-sur-Seine on Wednesday.

The camp had become home to about 450 migrants, with images of the eviction spreading rapidly across social media.

DESPITE SECURITY RISKS, PLANS TO OPEN PARIS OLYMPICS ON RIVER SEINE REMAIN UNCHANGED AND ON TRACK

Aid workers are concerned that the broader effort by Paris authorities to clear out migrants and other people sleeping rough in the city before the summer Olympics is troubling, as those evicted are not provided longer-term housing assistance.

A person sleeps just next to the Eiffel Tower Wednesday, April 10, 2024 in Paris. With the Paris Games 100 days away, French police carried out a large-scale eviction at an abandoned factory, located on the southern outskirts of Paris in Vitry-sur-Sein on Wednesday, April 17, 2024. (Laurent Cipriani/AP Photo)

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“The squat was the biggest in France. It doubled in size in one year because of the Olympics. Last year, authorities cleared out migrants from nearby the Olympic Village, and many displaced people came here,” said Paul Alauzy of the humanitarian organization Médecins du Monde, who has been closely following the steady pace of evictions over two years.

The conditions inside the warehouse were cramped, Alauzy said.

The clearance operation will continue over several days. The site is empty: 150 people left the night before the police arrived, while 300 were evicted before 8 a.m. on Wednesday morning. Among the 450 were 20 children and 50 women, the aid group said.

This action is part of a broader push by local authorities to dismantle makeshift camps as the city prepares to host the Olympics from July 26 to August 11.

Advocacy groups working with the homeless and other vulnerable populations have been voicing their concerns for months. They have been particularly vocal about the accelerated pace of camp clearances as the Games approach, warning of the dire consequences for those who find themselves without shelter.

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On Wednesday, observers said some five buses were at the site, intended to transport migrants to specially allocated sites in cities such as Orleans or Bordeaux, or in the wider Paris region, Ile-de-France. Other migrants will be bused to temporary filtering sites.

Alauzy said he fears that “it will just be a matter of days or weeks for many of the migrants to be sleeping rough on the street again.”

Umbrella association Revers de la Medaille, French for The Medal’s Other Side, which underscores the harmful effects of the Games on the most precarious populations, said it did “not know where families with school-going children were sent to.”

The fate of these displaced individuals remains a pressing issue as the city gears up for its time in the global spotlight, highlighting the tension between urban beautification efforts and support for marginalized communities.

Earlier this month, French police removed about 50 migrants, including families with young children, from the forecourt of Paris City Hall. The migrants packed their belongings and boarded a bus to temporary government housing in the town of Besançon in eastern France.

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Responding to a question about Wednesday’s evacuation, French Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera said she wanted “to emphasize is that it has nothing to do with the Olympics.”

“These policies, they were implemented before the Games, they will be implemented after the Games,” she said. “And we want to handle those difficult situations with the best possible humanity. This is why we work with the aid groups. We really want to make things as fair as they can be.”

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Columbia University leaders face scrutiny over anti-Semitism on campus

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Columbia University leaders face scrutiny over anti-Semitism on campus

Leaders from Columbia University have appeared before a committee in the United States Congress to face questions about alleged instances of anti-Semitism on campus.

The hearing was a sequel of sorts to a similar panel held in December, featuring the presidents of Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

But on Wednesday, Columbia University President Nemat “Minouche” Shafik sought to avoid the same pitfalls that made the previous hearing go viral.

She pledged firm action to combat anti-Semitism, even engaging in discussions about specific Columbia professors and disciplinary measures during the hearing.

“We have already suspended 15 students from Columbia. We have six on disciplinary probation,” Shafik said, laying out her actions before the Committee on Education and the Workforce, part of the House of Representatives.

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“These are more disciplinary actions that have been taken probably in the last decade at Columbia. And I promise you, from the messages I’m hearing from students, they are getting the message that violations of our policies will have consequences.”

Still, Republicans on the committee sought to hold Columbia University to account for what they considered failures since the start of the war in Gaza on October 7.

On that date, the Palestinian group Hamas attacked southern Israel, killing upwards of 1,000 people. In the subsequent war, Israeli attacks in Gaza killed more than 33,800 Palestinians, prompting widespread protest.

Like many college campuses, Columbia University has been a centre for student activism in the months since, with demonstrators rallying both in support of the war and against it.

But the university has drawn particular scrutiny, given its prominence as a prestigious Ivy League school and its attempts to crack down on unauthorised gatherings.

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Some critics have argued that the suspension of pro-Palestinian students and groups has put a damper on free speech on campus, while others allege the administration has allowed a hostile atmosphere to thrive.

The president of Columbia University, Nemat Shafik, speaks before the House Education and the Workforce Committee on April 17 [Ken Cedeno/Reuters]

Partisan divide over campus activity

Committee chair Virginia Foxx opened Wednesday’s hearing with a statement championing the view that campus administrators have failed to create a safe learning environment for Jewish students.

She pointed to pro-Palestinian activism as evidence that Columbia and other campuses “have erupted into hotbeds of anti-Semitism and hate”.

“Columbia stands guilty of gross negligence at best — and at worst has become a platform for those supporting terrorism and violence against the Jewish people,” she said in prepared remarks.

Her statement referenced an incident on October 11 when an Israeli student was allegedly beaten with a stick while hanging posters of the captives taken by Hamas.

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But at several points during the hearing, representatives took to the microphone to point out that anti-Semitism was part of a wider problem of discrimination and hate in the US.

“Anti-Semitism is not the only form of hatred rising in our schools. It’s not the only form of hatred that is impacting our children’s or students’ ability to learn,” Representative Teresa Leger Fernandez, a Democrat, said from her seat on the committee.

“Islamophobia and hate crimes against LGBTQ students have also recently spiked. They’ve led to deaths by suicide, harassment. But this committee has not held a single hearing on these issues.”

Meanwhile, Representative Ilhan Omar, a prominent progressive voice in the House, sought to dispel any conflation of antiwar protests with anti-Jewish hate.

“Have you seen a protest saying, ‘We are against Jewish people’?” Omar asked Columbia President Shafik, who answered, “No.”

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Omar continued by highlighting the case of pro-Palestinian students being sprayed with a foul-smelling chemical at Columbia and being “harassed and intimidated” in other instances.

“There has been a recent attack on the democratic rights of students across the country,” she said.

Virginia Foxx speaks from the podium at a congressional hearing.
Committee Chair Virginia Foxx led the hearing called ‘Columbia in Crisis: Columbia University’s Response to Antisemitism’ on April 17 [Jose Luis Magana/AP Photo]

Controversy looms over hearing

Shafik sought to walk a fine line during the hearing, pledging swift and decisive action against anti-Semitism while underscoring her campus’s commitment to free speech.

She was joined by Claire Shipman and David Greenwald, from Columbia’s board of trustees, as well as David Schizer, a member of the campus task force against anti-Semitism.

But looming over the proceedings was the spectre of December’s hearing, which led to the resignations of two university presidents.

On December 5, Claudine Gay of Harvard, Liz Magill of the University of Pennsylvania and Sally Kornbluth of MIT faced the same committee for questions about anti-Semitism on their campuses.

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During the meeting, Republican Representative Elise Stefanik pressed the university presidents to explain — with simple, yes-or-no answers — whether “calling for the genocide of Jews” would violate their campus codes of conduct.

In each case, the university presidents sought to differentiate between protected speech and harassment, leading to convoluted answers.

“If the speech turns into conduct, it can be harassment, yes,” Magill said. She later added: “It is a context-dependent decision, Congresswoman.”

Clips of the hearing went viral shortly thereafter, with politicians on both sides of the aisle slamming the university presidents for failing to make a forceful denunciation of anti-Semitism and genocide.

Magill resigned four days after the hearing, as the public outrage grew. Gay — Harvard’s first Black president — also stepped down in January, facing pressure not only over the hearing but also over questions of plagiarism.

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Those events cast a shadow over Wednesday’s panel, and several representatives made direct references to them.

Republican Representative Aaron Bean, for instance, applauded Columbia’s administrators for giving more forthright answers than their counterparts at Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania.

“Y’all have done something that they weren’t able to do: You’ve been able to condemn anti-Semitism without using the phrase, ‘It depends on the context,’” he said.

“But the problem is: Action on campus doesn’t match your rhetoric today.”

A standard approach to hate

On Wednesday, Shafik and the Columbia administrators were also pressed over many of the same issues as their colleagues from Harvard, MIT and the University of Pennsylvania.

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Republicans on the committee asked them to weigh in on chants like, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”. While some consider the chant anti-Semitic, others see it simply as a call for Palestinian statehood.

“I have received letters from our Jewish faculty who say they also don’t think it is anti-Semitic,” Shafik said at one point during the hearing.

But she also explained that she personally felt that language was “incredibly hurtful”.

One recommendation she said the campus was considering would create specific spaces for that kind of protest.

“If you are going to chant, it should only be in a certain place, so people who don’t want to hear it are protected from having to hear it,” Shafik said, relaying the idea.

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Schizer, meanwhile, indicated that he advocated for a standard approach to hate and harassment, no matter who was being targeted.

“I’m a conservative. I’m close to many conservative students. There have been times they’ve gotten the signal that they should really go slow on a particular event or not articulate a particular position because it makes others feel uncomfortable,” Schizer said.

“And it’s striking how that kind of language has not been applied to Jewish students. When Jewish students have said, ‘We feel uncomfortable,’ the emphasis has been: ‘No, no, no, free speech.’”

“Now I want to be clear: I think free speech is essential, but I also think consistency is essential. We need to have the same approach for everyone.”

Elise Stefanik speaks during a congressional hearing.
Representative Elise Stefanik pressed Columbia University’s president over her hiring practices [Jose Luis Magana/AP Photo]

Professors under fire

Some of the fiercest criticism, however, ultimately fell to Columbia professors who were not present at the hearing.

Committee members cited statements from professors like Joseph Massad, Mohamed Abdou and Katherine Franke as evidence of bias and discrimination among the Columbia faculty.

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“We have 4,700 faculty at Columbia, most of whom spend all of their time dedicated to teaching their students,” Shafik said at one point, as she defended her hiring practices.

“I have five cases at the moment who have either been taken out of the classroom or dismissed.”

In the case of Abdou, a visiting professor, Stefanik confronted Shafik with a post he wrote on social media on October 11, saying he was “with Hamas”.

“He will never work at Columbia again,” Shafik responded. “He has been terminated. And not just terminated, but his files will show that he will never work at Columbia again.”

Massad, meanwhile, came under fire for an article he wrote in the publication Electronic Antifada, describing the October 7 attack as an act of “innovative Palestinian resistance”.

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“Mr Massad is under investigation,” Shafik said, adding that she believed the professor had been removed from a leadership role within the university.

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