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Could Israel be thrown out of football competitions next week?

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Since the United Nations commission of inquiry formally declared Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, there have been growing calls for the country to be suspended from international football competitions.

Israel’s national team is currently participating in European qualifiers for next summer’s men’s Fifa World Cup, while Israeli club Maccabi Tel Aviv is playing in the Europa League.

The BBC has been told by a senior figure at one football federation that many nations are pushing for a vote on whether to throw Israel out of European football, and that the leadership of governing body Uefa wants to act.

On Friday the Turkish FA demanded Israel be banned from football, and a group of 48 athletes signed a joined letter calling for the country’s suspension.

The Times reports that a vote could come as soon as next week and that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been campaigning against it.

Meanwhile, the US State Department has vowed to resist any attempt to bar Israel from potentially qualifying for a World Cup which will be held mostly on American soil.

So how exactly could a vote work, and what repercussions could it have?

How would a vote work?

Decisions on important matters in European football are made by the executive committee of Uefa, the governing body for the continent.

The executive committee – a group of 20 officials from its different member states – controls Uefa, overseeing the management of its governance, finances and rules.

The group is headed by president Aleksandr Ceferin, who has been in post since succeeding Michel Platini in 2016.

Sixteen members are then elected to their positions by vote, while two represent the European Club Association (ECA), and one represents the European Leagues organisation.

Emergency meetings of the group are not necessarily announced to the public, and even once the result of a vote is declared, Uefa does not typically reveal which members voted which way.

In order for any decision to be voted through by the executive committee, a simple majority of 11 out of 20 members is needed.

In reality, Uefa typically undertakes formal votes of its executive committee only when it knows there will be a clear outcome in one direction or another.

Decisions taken by the group are effective immediately, meaning a decision to suspend Israel would in theory be implemented straight away.

As Uefa governs the World Cup qualifying process for Europe, Israel would effectively be barred from next summer’s tournament.

The Israeli FA did not respond to a request for comment when contacted by BBC Sport.

Who would be making the decision?

The 16 executive committee members who are elected come from a range of countries, and represent their national football federations. One, Moshe Zuares, is an Israeli who was elected this year.

Among the others four come from countries – Spain, Norway, Albania and Armenia – whose governments have issued pro-Palestine messages. However, apart from Turkey, no other football associations have publicly expressed a position on Israeli teams’ participation in international football.

The head of the ECA, Nasser Al-Khelaifi, is a very powerful figure. He is also president of European champions Paris St-Germain, and chairperson of BeIN Media Group, one of Uefa’s most lucrative broadcasting partners.

Al-Khelaifi is a former tennis player from Qatar, which has criticised what it called “reckless Israeli behaviour” after Israel’s forces carried out a strike on senior Hamas leaders in the Qatari capital, Doha, this month. Al-Khelaifi has made no public comment about Israel’s participation in competitions.

His fellow ECA representative Miguel Angel Gil Marin, CEO of Atletico Madrid, is Spanish, while European Leagues representative Claudius Schafer is Swiss.

Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin and Paris Saint-Germain president Nasser Al-Khelaifi smile together in the stands at a football matchGetty Images

Could Uefa and Fifa disagree?

Any decision to suspend Israel taken by Uefa would need to be ratified by global governing body Fifa afterwards.

When Russia was thrown out of football competitions in 2022, Fifa and Uefa announced the decision in a joint statement just four days after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine began.

But there is a possibility of disagreement.

Earlier this year Fifa president Gianni Infantino described his relationship with US president Donald Trump as “absolutely crucial”.

Infantino even invited Trump to be part of the Club World Cup trophy presentation in July, and has left a replica of the competition’s trophy sitting in the White House’s Oval Office.

The Trump administration is vehemently pro-Israel, strongly criticised the decision of the UK and others to recognise a Palestinian state, and is now making clear its opposition to any plan to bar Israel from the World Cup.

The BBC has asked Fifa whether it would ratify a Uefa vote to suspend Israel but has not received a response.

Us president Donald Trump smiles while looking at the Fifa World Cup trophy being held aloft by Fifa president Gianni Infantino in the White House's Oval OfficeGetty Images

Which athletes are calling for Israel to be banned?

On Friday a group of 48 athletes signed a statement calling on Uefa to “immediately suspend” Israel from all competitions until it “complies with international law and ends its killing of civilians” in Gaza.

French World Cup winner Paul Pogba is the highest profile signatory, while Crystal Palace midfielder Cheick Doucoure is the only current Premier League player to sign, alongside others including ex-Chelsea winger Hakim Ziyech, former Ipswich captain Sam Morsy and former England cricketer Moeen Ali.

The signatories say they are a “united voice of sports professionals from around the world, standing for justice, fairness, and humanity in sport”.

The statement adds: “[Israel’s] actions violate international humanitarian law and contradict the principles of respect, safety, and peace that sport represents.

“Sport is not neutral in the face of injustice. To remain silent is to accept that the lives of some are worth less than others.”

Paul Pogba looks on before kick-off of an AS Monaco match at Stade Louis II in Ligue 1Getty Images

Is perception changing at the top of football?

Uefa has previously resisted calls to bar Israel from its competitions, with Ceferin saying in August that he is generally opposed to bans.

“I think that all athletes should have the opportunity to compete and that other things should be handled differently,” the Slovenian said.

But the organisation was heavily criticised – including by Liverpool star Mohamed Salah – in the summer when it posted about Palestinian footballer Suleiman al-Obeid on social media but did not refer to the circumstances surrounding his death.

The Palestinian Football Association (PFA) had said he had been killed in an Israeli attack while waiting for humanitarian aid in the southern Gaza Strip.

The PFA has also said that the number of footballers killed or who have died from starvation in Gaza totals 421, including 103 children.

Subsequently, Uefa placed banners on the pitch before the Super Cup match between Paris St-Germain and Tottenham in Italy in August reading ‘stop killing children’ and ‘stop killing civilians’.

The Turkish FA has now become the first Uefa member to publicly demand Israel’s suspension.

“Despite positioning themselves as defenders of civilized values and peace, the sports world and football institutions have remained silent for too long,” said Turkish FA president Ibrahim Haciosmanoglu.

“It is time for Fifa and Uefa to take action. Israel must be banned from all sporting competitions immediately.”

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

At least 65,502 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

Former Arsenal and current Real Betis defender Hector Bellerin has been outspoken on the Israel-Gaza conflict, and told the BBC he feels the rules have not been equally applied to Russia and Israel.

“I just don’t understand how when the war between Russia and Ukraine started, Russia couldn’t compete in any sports, and now the measurement is a different bar for what is happening with Israel,” the Spaniard said. “I don’t think that is right.

“There are kids and families that are being bombed every day. I wish that all my colleagues, all the organisations in football would step forward, because football most of the time is the place where people look.”

But others maintain that Israel should keep their place in Uefa competitions.

“For either Uefa or Fifa to remove Israel from football competitions would be a betrayal of Jewish communities all over the world, and an act of vilification, demonisation and de-legitimisation of Israel,” said Simon Johnson, ex-director of corporate affairs at the FA and former chief executive of the Jewish Leadership Council.

“It would do nothing to end the war or bring peace to the region.”

Pressure seems to be building towards a formal decision which, whichever way it goes, could have seismic consequences far beyond football.

Additional reporting by Shamoon Hafez.

Business

European stocks reverse trends as financials gain

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European stocks clawed their way back from three-week lows on Friday, lifted by gains in financials and industrials.

Dublin

Irish stocks rose on Friday, buoyed by gains in heavyweights such as Kingspan.

But banking shares dipped, with AIB losing 0.65 per cent, and Bank of Ireland down 0.61 per cent by the close of the day.

Shares in insulation specialist Kingspan rose 1.2 per cent after brokerage Citigroup raised its price target.

Glanbia rose 0.57 per cent, while food group Kerry was slightly off the pace, losing 0.1 per cent.

Shares in Ryanair hit a high of €24.18 during the session, before dipping to €24, a 1.6 per cent increase over its opening price.

Shares in construction companies Glenveagh and Cairn Homes also edged lower.

London

The benchmark FTSE 100 gained 0.8 per cent and posted a weekly gain of 0.74 per cent, led by banks and consumer discretionary shares. The mid-cap FTSE 250 rose 0.4 per cent on the day, and was also up 0.4 per cent over the week.

Heavyweight bank stocks rose 1.7 per cent after Citigroup strategists kept their “overweight” recommendation on Europe’s banking sector.

HSBC and NatWest were among its top picks, and their shares were 1.3 per cent and 3 per cent higher, respectively. Travel and leisure stocks added 1.6 per cent, led higher by a 4 per cent gain for InterContinental Hotels Group after JPMorgan double upgraded it to overweight from underweight. IHG was the top percentage gainer on the FTSE 100.

Oil major Shell and BP rose 1.3 per cent and 1.2 per cent, lifting the broader energy index as oil prices climbed on Friday.

The British pharma and biotech subindex rose 0.6 per cent.

Europe

The pan-European STOXX 600 rose 0.8 per cent, and ended the week just 0.07 per cent higher.

Spanish stocks outperformed other regional markets, rising 1.3 per cent to close at a more than one-week high, with other major indexes also in positive territory.

Germany’s Munich Re and France’s SCOR led European insurer stocks 2.1 per cent higher, snapping a three-day losing streak.

Shares of steel producers also rose after German business daily Handelsblatt reported that the European Commission plans to impose tariffs of 25 per cent to 50 per cent on Chinese steel and related products.

The world’s second-largest steelmaker ArcelorMittal was up 2.6 per cent, while Aperam rose 2.2 per cent. Germany’s Thyssenkrupp added 3.5 per cent and Salzgitter gained 5.2 per cent.

Healthcare stocks reversed earlier losses to end flat.

New York

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq indexes were set to snap a three-week winning streak in a mixed session on Friday, as investors digested the latest inflation data amid expectations of aggressive interest rate cuts.

By lase morning the Dow Jones Industrial Average had risen 213 points, or 0.46 per cent, to 46,160.42. The S&P 500 gained 14.60 points, or 0.22 per cent, to 6,619.32, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 27.02 points, or 0.12 per cent, to 22,357.68.

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are on track for their worst weekly performance since late July.

Financials, up about 1 per cent, were among the biggest boosts to the S&P 500 on the day. A 4 per cent gain in Boeing and 1 per cent rise in Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan each supported the Dow.

Shares of truck maker Paccar, which makes most of its trucks for the US market domestically, gained 5.1 per cent to top the S&P 500, a day after US President Donald Trump unveiled fresh import tariffs, including on heavy-duty trucks, branded pharmaceutical products, kitchen cabinets and bathroom vanities and upholstered furniture. Drugmaker Eli Lilly rose 1 per cent.

In corporate news, GlobalFoundries jumped 8.7 per cent after a report the US was planning a chip production rule to curb reliance on overseas supply. Costco Wholesale fell 2.6 per cent to the bottom of the S&P 500, after the company reported quarterly results. – Additional reporting: Reuters

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Ex-Reform politician admits Russia-linked bribery charges

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33 minutes ago

David DeansWales political reporter, The Old Bailey and

Miriam BarkerBBC Wales

Reform UK’s former leader in Wales has admitted taking bribes to make statements in favour of Russia while being a Member of the European Parliament.

Nathan Gill, 52, from Llangefni, Anglesey, pleaded guilty to eight counts of bribery between 6 December 2018 and 18 July 2019.

The politician took money from Oleg Voloshyn – a man once described by the US government as a “pawn” of Russian secret services – and made speeches in the parliament, statements to a TV channel and arranged an event with a pro-Russian politician.

Gill will be sentenced in November and his defence barrister said he expected to be jailed.

The Old Bailey was told he was tasked by Ukrainian Oleg Voloshyn on at least eight occasions to make specific statements in return for money and there was evidence of WhatsApp messages between the two men.

Mr Voloshyn is a former member of the Ukrainian parliament for the pro-Russian Opposition Platform for Life party.

image112ua.tv

The US, which sanctioned him in 2022 during the Joe Biden presidency prior to the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, said at the time that he had worked with “Russian actors to undermine Ukrainian officials and advocate on behalf of Russia”.

In December 2018, Gill used a parliamentary speech to defend TV channels 112 Ukraine and NewsOne which he argued were being treated badly by the Ukrainian state.

Those channels were reportedly linked to Viktor Medvedchuk, a man with close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, and were taken off air in 2021.

Mr Medvedhuck is a former pro-Russian politician who, at the start of the full-scale invasion was arrested in Ukraine.

He was later exchanged with Russia in a prisoner swap and his daughter’s godfather is Mr Putin.

Gill gave two contributions in favour of the channels in December 2018 and March 2019 and, in the latter, accused the Ukrainians of putting “undue pressure” on the TV channels.

In other instances Gill appeared on 112 Ukraine itself – in one case to speak in support of Mr Medvedchuk who faced criminal proceedings for high treason.

Gill also arranged MEPs to speak to 112 Ukraine and arranged to host a presentation with Mr Medvedchuk in exchange for bribes.

imagePA Media Nathan Gill; a man with a grey coat on, and underneath there is a turquoise tie and white shirt. He has short grey spiked hair and a a grey beard.PA Media

Gill’s activities emerged in WhatsApp messages on his phone after he was stopped at Manchester Airport on September 13 2021 under counter-terrorism laws.

In court on Friday, prosecutor Mark Heywood KC said the messages revealed communication between Gill and Mr Voloshyn of an “agreement to receive money in connection with his performance in his duties as a member of the European Parliament”.

They included “posing questions for the consideration of [the European] parliament, making contact with senior officials of the European Commission at the parliament, arranging for events and making statements”.

Counter-terrorism detectives also seized devices from Gill’s home and investigators matched WhatsApp messages with statements Gill made in support of pro-Russia media being present in Ukraine.

Some of the statements appeared in Ukrainian media.

Mr Heywood said the guilty pleas were “satisfactory” because the bribery charges reflected the criminal activities and agreed the conspiracy charge could lie on file.

Peter Wright KC, defending, acknowledged Gill was facing a substantial jail sentence, but asked for bail for the married father-of-five before his next hearing.

He told the court: “It is recognised that it is inevitable that the defendant will receive an immediate sentencing to prison.”

Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb told the court: “Nathan Gill has admitted having asked questions, made statements and carried out other activities in or connected with the European Parliament in support of pro-Russian parties in the Ukraine conflict.”

Dominic Murphy, head of the Met’s counter terrorism command, which led the investigation, said Gill was “taking payments to peddle narratives” that would have had the effect of being beneficial towards Russian interests.

He added: “This case goes to the heart of our democratic values and as we’ve shown here, we will not hesitate to investigate and disrupt anyone seeking to harm or undermine these values and our national security.”

Who is Nathan Gill?

Nathan Gill was a prominent figure in the pro-Brexit right wing of Welsh politics in the 2010s.

He served as a UKIP, and later Brexit Party, MEP between 2014 and 2020 and was leader of UKIP Wales between 2014 and 2016.

He was leader of Reform UK Wales between March and May 2021, leading the party’s Senedd/Welsh Parliament election campaign but is no longer a member of the party.

Llyr Powell, Reform UK’s candidate for the Caerphilly Senedd by-election in October, worked for Gill prior to the offences taking place.

Reform said Powell worked for Gill until December 2017.

Welsh Labour said: “We thought that Nigel Farage would put his own interests before Wales, but now it turns out he’ll put Russian interests before Wales too.

“With Reform Caerphilly candidate Llyr Powell a former employee of Nathan Gill’s, the people of Caerphilly have a right to know – what did he know about this case?”

Reform UK said: “This is pure desperation from a Welsh Labour Party that is being rejected by the public and floundering in the polls. This sort of gutter politics has no place in Wales.”

The other candidates for the by-election are:

  • Conservatives – Gareth Potter
  • Green Party – Gareth Hughes
  • Gwlad – Anthony Cook
  • Labour – Richard Tunnicliffe
  • Plaid Cymru – Lindsay Whittle
  • UKIP – Roger Quilliam
  • Welsh Liberal Democrats – Steve Aicheler
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YouTube TV, NBCUniversal warn of impending carriage dispute that could lead to network blackout

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image
  • YouTube TV and NBCUniversal are ramping up for a carriage dispute that could lead to a blackout at the end of the month.
  • NBCUniversal has never pulled its programming from any video distributor in its history within the U.S.
  • YouTube TV said in a statement it will issue a $10 credit to all customers if NBCUniversal programming is off the air for “an extended period of time.”
INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA – NOVEMBER 17: A detail view of a NBC Sunday Night Football video camera during the first half between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium on November 17, 2024 in Inglewood, California.
Ric Tapia | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

YouTube TV subscribers may soon be without “Sunday Night Football,” “The Voice” and other NBCUniversal programming as the parties ramp up for a carriage dispute that could lead to a blackout at the end of the month.

CNBC reported the two sides could be headed for a potential blackout earlier Thursday. It’s a sign of YouTube’s relatively newfound muscle in streaming and television.

YouTube TV has about 10 million subscribers, according to people familiar the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters.

NBCUniversal said in a statement that YouTube TV “has refused the best rates and terms in the market, demanding preferential treatment and seeking an unfair advantage over competitors to dominate the video marketplace — all under the false pretense of fighting for the consumer. The result: YouTube TV customers will lose access to NBCUniversal’s premium programming.”

Starting Thursday night, NBCUniversal will begin running messages for YouTube TV customers alerting them to the impending loss of networks if a deal isn’t reached.

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NBCUniversal has never “gone dark” in its history in the U.S., both under the ownership of Comcast and General Electric before that, according to a company spokesperson.

YouTube TV issued its own statement Thursday, saying: “NBCUniversal is asking us to pay more than what they charge consumers for the same content on Peacock, which would mean less flexibility and higher prices for our subscribers. We are committed to working with NBCUniversal to reach a fair deal for both sides ahead of our current agreement expiring on September 30. If their content is unavailable for an extended period of time, we’ll offer our subscribers a $10 credit.”

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal, which owns CNBC. Versant would become the new parent company of CNBC upon Comcast’s planned spinoff of Versant.

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