Business
Europe ‘fuelled by something money can’t buy’ – Donald
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24 September 2025
European captain Luke Donald says his team are “fuelled by something money can’t buy” as he cranked up Ryder Cup intensity with what appeared to be a dig at their American rivals.
All 12 of the American team – plus captain Keegan Bradley – are being given $500,000 (£370,000), with $300,000 (£220,000) of that going to a charity of their choice.
It is the first time in the biennial tournament’s 98-year history that players have received a stipend. The Europeans are not paid to play.
“[The Ryder Cup] is not about prize money or ranking points. It’s about pride, it’s about representing your flag, your shirt and the legacy you leave behind,” Donald said during Wednesday’s opening ceremony.
He added: “We are fuelled by something money can’t buy – purpose, brotherhood and a responsibility to honour those who came before us, while inspiring those whose time is yet to come.”
Earlier, Collin Morikawa dismissed the idea that the US players receiving payment might mean they have less desire than Europe’s team.
Asked how much he thinks each American deserves, Morikawa said: “There’s no number. It could be zero. It could be one dollar. There isn’t a right or a wrong amount.
“Look, I think at the end of the day, all 12 of us here playing when we tee it up on Friday, and before this all started, we just want to win the Ryder Cup.
“We want to win it for ourselves. We want to win it for our country.”
The payment for the Americans has brought a lot of negative attention, with critics believing it does not fit with the ethos of the Ryder Cup.
Detractors also argue the players – who earn multi-millions on the tours – do not need the extra income.
Former European Ryder Cup player Darren Clarke has previously said the idea of being paid to play in the tournament “does not sit well” with him, while former European captain Paul McGinley has described the move as “a massive mistake”.
American player Xander Schauffele accused the media of trying to make the issue “a negative thing”.
Morikawa, who won The Open in 2021, says the financial support means the players can help people they “care about”.
“I think the PGA of America is making a lot of money from the Ryder Cup and I think on that end, it’s just to give us an opportunity to either pay our respective teams, because look, the teams behind us, they don’t get the recognition that we do but they deserve a lot of it that we get,” he added.
“Also just to give back to our own communities, right. We have a lot of communities back home that sometimes don’t get the recognition.”
Morikawa is the latest American player to play down the significance of the appearance money.
Scottie Scheffler, Patrick Cantlay and Schauffele said on Tuesday they would be donating the full $500,000 to charity.
Not all the US players have divulged what they plan to do with the cash.
“It gives us more opportunities, I think, to help out people that we care about,” Morikawa said.
Rose open to Trump presenting trophy
Europe’s Justin Rose says he would relish seeing US President Donald Trump present the visiting team with the Ryder Cup on Sunday.
Trump, who is a huge golf fan, is set to attend the opening day of the tournament on Friday.
He is not currently scheduled to be at Bethpage over the weekend, but recently presented Chelsea with the football Club World Cup on stage in New Jersey and also attended the US Open men’s tennis final earlier this month.
If Trump did decide to turn up again on Sunday, Rose would not be opposed to the president handing over the trophy to the Europeans in the event of a rare away win.
“I’m not sure he’s going to want to be on the stage congratulating the team that wins in his backyard,” added the Englishman.
“But of course, he’s the president, so [he gets] ultimate respect, and that would be a great opportunity.”
Business
US attacks on alleged drug boats are ‘act of tyranny’, Colombia’s president tells BBC
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US airstrikes on alleged drug-trafficking boats in the Caribbean Sea are an “act of tyranny”, Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro told the BBC in an interview where he also called for criminal proceedings against US officials if investigations find Colombians were killed in the attacks.
President Donald Trump has cast the strikes, which have reportedly killed 17 since they began this month, as needed to stop the flow of fentanyl and other illegal narcotics into the US.
Legal experts and lawmakers, though, have questioned if they violate international human rights laws.
“Why launch a missile if you could simply stop the boat and arrest the crew?” said Petro. “That’s what one would call murder.”
Speaking to the BBC on Wednesday, Petro said there should be “zero deaths” in stopping speedboats believed to be involved in drug smuggling.
“We have a long history of collaborating with American agencies and other agencies of carrying out maritime seizures of cocaine,” he said. “No one has ever died before. There is no need to kill anyone.”
He added that the principle of the proportionality of force is violated “if you use anything more than a pistol”.
The strikes in international waters have primarily focused on Colombia’s neighbour Venezuela, according to the Trump administration, but the US has provided little details about the targets and the individuals killed, and its reports that members of the Tren de Aragua gang were on the first attacked boat are in dispute.
Democratic lawmakers in Washington have demanded answers from the White House over the legality of the strikes, which United Nations experts have described as extrajudicial executions.
Asked about Petro’s comments, the White House said Trump was “prepared to use every element of American power to stop drugs from flooding into our country and to bring those responsible to justice”.
In the interview, conducted in New York where dignitaries from around the world have gathered for an annual high-profile United Nations meeting, Petro also accused the Trump administration of humiliating his people and said South American nations like his would not “bow down to the king”.
After returning to office in January, Trump toughened his talk, as well as his trade policies, for all of Latin America as he began a major deportation sweep of people he says have illegally crossed the US southern border.
Trump also designated several drug-trafficking organisations and criminal groups in Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America as terrorist organisations.
As well as Tren de Aragua, Trump has taken aim at the Cartel of the Suns – a group that the US alleges is headed by Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and other high-ranking Venezuelan officials, some drawn from the country’s military or intelligence services.
The US military has moved to bolster its forces in the southern Caribbean over the last two months, including through the deployment of additional naval vessels and thousands of US Marines and sailors.
Petro has repeatedly sparred with his US counterpart. Pressed on whether he now risked further isolating his country, Petro said it was Trump who was isolating the United States with his foreign policies.
“Trump had already insulted me during a presidential campaign, he called me a terrorist,” he said.
Business
Bank of Ireland makes unlikely dash to IT winners’ circle
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Irish banking apps are a source of endless frustration to customers, even in the absence of periodic service disruptions.
But Bank of Ireland’s has come in for particular stick, described, for example, over the summer by comparison website Bonkers.ie as feeling “dated” and “clunky” – and lagging behind that of AIB’s “by no means perfect” offering.
The app was the most visible customer-facing outcome of the €1.15 billion technology investment programme that ran between 2016 and 2021. But even various subsequent app upgrades – including spending alerts and improvements in how customers can manage new statements – have left a lot be desired.
It may come as a surprise, therefore, that Bank of Ireland’s technology has been listed by Autonomous, the international financial sector research firm (owned by AllianceBernstein), as up there with the best in Europe.
Autonomous said in the 8th annual edition of its ranking of technology in retail banks that Bank of Ireland is now in the “winners’ quadrant this year”, in a list otherwise dominated by UK, Austrian and Benelux banks.
The ranking is based of hundreds of variables drawn from an in depth survey of individual banks, market data, banks financial and public sources, Autonomous said.
Strangely, AIB, which would be widely viewed by analysts to have been a more consistent spender on IT than its rival over the past two decades, has languished in Autonomous’s “relative laggards” column among 30 banks studied for the report.
[ Irish banks in a deathmatch with RevolutOpens in new window ]
Where exactly Bank of Ireland scored well is not entirely clear from the report – but it made the top 25 per cent of the banks in terms of current state of digitisation and the outlook for ongoing transformation. Autonomous said it looked at things from mobile app and information technology (IT) spend to board and executive management focus on IT, and movements in staff focused on IT development.
Is it possible the staffing variable was skewed by the insourcing last year of previously outsourced IT work?
And is Bank of Ireland also getting the benefit in advance of significant upgrade of its mobile app, set to be rolled-out by the end of the year? It promises to be more user friendly and easier for the bank to add new features (such as the Zippay instant payments service the three Irish banks plan to launch early next year)? Here’s hoping.
Business
‘Anti-ICE’ message on ammunition at Dallas shooting that killed immigration detainee
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Ben HattonWashington DC
A detainee has died and two others are critically injured after a rooftop sniper opened fire at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) centre in Dallas, Texas, officials say.
The gunman fired indiscriminately at the ICE facility and at a nearby unmarked van, law enforcement officials say, before dying from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
No law enforcement were injured. FBI Director Kash Patel posted a photo on X of unused ammunition recovered from the scene. One casing has the phrase “ANTI-ICE” on it.
It is the latest in a string of attacks on ICE facilities in recent months as the agency ramps up efforts to deliver on US President Donald Trump’s pledge for mass deportations.
“While the investigation is ongoing, an initial review of the evidence shows an ideological motive behind this attack,” Patel wrote on X.
“These despicable, politically motivated attacks against law enforcement are not a one-off.”
Dallas police said officers responded to an assist officer call at the facility around 06:40 local time (11:40 GMT).
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said three detainees were shot. One has died, and two were critically injured, it said. They remain in critical condition, officials later said.
The department had initially said two people had died in addition to the shooter, only to revise that information conditions hours later.
One injured detainee is a Mexican national, the Mexican foreign ministry said.
Acting ICE director Todd Lyons identified the shooter as 29-year-old Joshua Jahn, the BBC’s US partner, CBS News reported. He died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities said.
Voter records indicate he was registered as an independent and last voted in the general election in 2024.
Jahn had cannabis related charges in Texas dating back to 2016, according to records seen by the BBC.
FBI special agent Joe Rothrock told a news conference that rounds found near the gunman contained “messages that are anti-ICE in nature”.
“This is just the most recent example of this type of attack,” he said, adding the FBI was investigating it as “an act of targeted violence”.
Dallas police said a preliminary investigation determined the suspect had opened fire from an adjacent building.
“The shooter fired indiscriminately at the ICE building, including at a van in the sallyport where the victims were shot,” DHS said in a statement.
The Reuters news agency reported that the building targeted is an ICE field office used for short-term processing of recently arrested detainees, and is not used as a detention facility.
Lyons told CBS News on Wednesday that the shooter deliberately targeted law enforcement with a “high-powered rifle”.
He said given the time are area of the shooting, it could have been more deadly.
The suspect “could have, in his indiscriminate fire, hit people traveling to work, civilians on the ground,” he said.
Edwin Cardona, a Dallas resident from Venezuela, told local media he was entering the building for an appointment when he heard gunfire.
“I was afraid for my family because my family was outside. I felt terrible because I thought something could happen to them. Thank God no,” he said.
Acting director of the Dallas ICE office Joshua Johnson told the news conference it was the second time he has had to stand in front of the media and talk about a gunman at one of his facilities.
“The takeaway from all of this is that the rhetoric has to stop,” he said.
Texas Senator Ted Cruz also spoke at the news conference, condemning “politically motivated violence”.
“Your political opponents are not Nazis,” he said, urging people not to demonise each other for partisan reasons. “The divisive rhetoric, tragically, has real consequences.”
While the shooter’s motive remains unclear, the attack comes amid growing concerns in the US about political violence in the wake of the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk this month.
US President Donald Trump, in a lengthy post on social media on Wednesday evening, said ICE officers are facing “an unprecedented increase in threats” and accused “Radical Left Democrats” of “constantly demonizing Law Enforcement”.
Trump noted on Monday he signed an executive order designating Antifa a terrorist organisation, and added he would sign another this week to “dismantle these Domestic Terrorism Networks”.
No information has been released by officials to suggest Antifa – a loosely organised, leftist movement that opposes far-right, racist and fascist groups – has any connection to the shooting.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a statement: “This shooting must serve as a wake-up call to the far-left that their rhetoric about ICE has consequences.”
Democratic lawmakers also condemned the shooting, including Senator Cory Booker who called it “an unacceptable act of violence”.
“While we don’t know all of the details yet, what we can, and all should, agree on is that the vilification of any group of people endangers them. It makes them targets. And it must stop,” he said on X.
Republican Governor of Texas Greg Abbott said on X the shooting would “NOT slow our arrest, detention, & deportation of illegal immigrants”.
The ICE field office in Dallas has been targeted by a series of protests this summer.
A man was arrested in August after he entered the facility claiming to have a bomb in his backpack, according to the DHS.
The 36-year-old US citizen, Bratton Dean Wilkinson, had shown the building’s security staff a device on his wrist that he described as a bomb “detonator,” the DHS said.
Last month shots were fired at ICE offices in San Antonio, Texas. No injuries were reported in that incident, which ICE blamed on “political rhetoric”.
Another shooting occurred on the 4 July public holiday at an ICE facility in Alvarado, Texas, after a protest escalated into a face-off with police. An officer was shot in the neck, and survived. Eleven people have been charged over that attack.
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