Breaking News
High-level talks over possible Israeli football ban – as English club urged to boycott match
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Discussions are taking place at high levels in European football about whether Israel should be banned but no decision has been taken, Sky News understands.
UEFA – along with world body FIFA – is facing growing calls to suspend Israel‘s national teams and club sides from international competitions.
A group of United Nations advisory experts says sporting sanctions are now needed after a UN commission of inquiry said Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
Those accusations are denied by Israel as it has continued to wage war on Hamas, two years since the October 7 2023 atrocities.
On Wednesday, fans of Greek side PAOK booed players from Israeli club Maccabi Tel Aviv at the start of their Europa League match, as they waved Palestinian flags and unveiled a big banner which read “Show Israel the red card”.
Several demonstrators were detained ahead of the game in Thessaloniki, which ended 0-0.
Two small protests took place in the northern Greek city, calling for Israeli clubs to be expelled from European competition in response to mass casualties in the war in Gaza.
Around 120 Israeli fans were held behind a police cordon while the Maccabi team bus was escorted by police to the 28,000-seater Toumba Stadium.
Alexandra Xanthaki, the UN special rapporteur for cultural rights, told Sky News: “I think that when we talk about teams, national teams, not individual athletes, of states that are subject to valid claims of genocide… this is where this is for sure a red line.”
FIFA and UEFA have previously rejected calls to suspend Israel but have not commented on the plea from UN rapporteurs.
Ms Xanthaki said Aston Villa should consider refusing to play Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Europa League in November at Villa Park – echoing calls from the club’s local independent MP, Ayoub Khan.
He told Sky News: “I think Aston Villa ought to take the high moral ground and refuse to play with Maccabi. I understand they want three points but there is also this moral argument and I suspect a large number of Villa fans wouldn’t really mind Aston making that decision.”
He highlighted potential security challenges in Birmingham dealing with visiting Israel fans at a game that could attract both pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel activism.
Mr Khan said: “My concern is around the safety of the local businesses, the local community, the local private hire drivers, bus drivers.”
Maccabi fans faced antisemitic attacks while playing in Amsterdam last year, while there were also anti-Arab chants heard.
Israel’s football association declined to comment on calls for the suspension of its teams from external competitions because they have not come from footballing counterparts.
But lawyers defending Israel have been fighting attempts to exclude the country from sport.
“It’s very unfortunate that there is destruction during a war, but the Israeli Football Association and Maccabi Tel Aviv are not responsible for that destruction,” Jonathan Turner, the chief executive of UK Lawyers for Israel, told Sky News.
“It does strike Jewish people perhaps to a considerable extent because many of us recall that the Nazis started with boycotting Jews.”
Read more from Sky News:
Israel ‘kills 22 people including nine children’ in Gaza
What recognising a Palestinian state actually means
One country banned from football is Russia, since 2022 following the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
That’s because of European sides refusing to play against Russians and safety concerns if they did.
It’s understood that European football chiefs are now starting to hear of teams not wanting to play Israeli opposition.
And UEFA has started to speak up against deaths in Gaza, with a “stop killing children” banner displayed on the pitch at the Super Cup in August.
But whether football should take a moral stand against Israel – and whether it can legally – is still being discussed.
Breaking News
Palestinian leader to address UN amid peace push
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Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas will address the United Nations virtually today as the United States, despite its opposition to him, weighs whether to try to stop Israeli annexation of the West Bank.
The 89-year-old Palestinian Authority president will address the UN General Assembly three days after France led a special summit in which a slew of Western nations recognised a state of Palestine.
US President Donald Trump’s administration adamantly rejected statehood and, in a highly unusual step, barred Mr Abbas and his senior aides from traveling to New York for the annual gathering of world leaders.
The General Assembly overwhelmingly voted to let Mr Abbas address the world body with a video message.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed not to allow a Palestinian state and far-right members of his cabinet have threatened to annex the West Bank in a bid to kill any prospect of true independence.
French President Emmanuel Macron, despite his disagreements with Mr Trump on statehood, said that the US leader joined him in opposing annexation.
“What President Trump told me yesterday was that the Europeans and Americans have the same position,” Mr Macron said in an interview jointly with France 24 and Radio France Internationale.
US special envoy Steve Witkoff said that Mr Trump, in a separate meeting with a group of leaders of Arab and Islamic nations, presented a 21-point plan for ending the war.
“I think it addresses Israeli concerns as well as the concerns of all the neighbours in the region,” he told the Concordia summit on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
“We’re hopeful, and I might say even confident, that in the coming days we’ll be able to announce some sort of breakthrough,” he added.
Divide on Palestinian Authority
Mr Macron said that the US proposal incorporates core elements of a French plan including disarmament of Hamas and the dispatch of an international stabilisation force.
A French position paper seen by AFP calls for the gradual transfer of security control in Gaza to a reformed Palestinian Authority once a ceasefire is in place.
Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, one of the leaders who met jointly with Mr Trump, said that the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country was willing to offer at least 20,000 troops.
Mr Abbas’s Palestinian Authority enjoys limited control over parts of the West Bank under agreements reached through the Oslo peace accords that started in 1993.
Mr Abbas’s Fatah is the rival of Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, although Mr Netanyahu’s government has sought to conflate the two.
In his address on Monday, Mr Abbas condemned the massive 7 October 2023 attacks by Hamas on Israel, which has responded with a relentless military offensive.
He also called on Hamas to disarm to the Palestinian Authority.
France and other European powers, while not joining Israeli and US efforts to delegitimise the Palestinian Authority, have said that it needs major reforms.
Mr Netanyahu will address the UN General Assembly tomorrow.
Breaking News
Candidates begin canvassing in Presidential Election
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In the first full day of campaigning in the Presidential Election, the three candidates will be canvassing in Dublin, Laois, and Limerick.
Independent candidate Catherine Connolly, who is backed by the left-leaning parties in the Oireachtas, will attend a meeting of the Dáil Public Accounts Committee this morning in her capacity as a TD for Galway West.
Afterwards, and as a presidential candidate, she will be campaigning in the capital, including at a rally in Harold’s Cross this evening.
The Fine Gael candidate Heather Humphreys will start her campaign today in Laois, with a lunchtime canvass in Portlaoise.
Later, she will be canvassing in Limerick City before attending a Fine Gael rally in Patrickswell.
Earlier, Ms Humphreys said housing supply is “the biggest challenge” facing the country and “very tough”, but stopped short of agreeing with outgoing President Michael D Higgins that it has become a “disaster”.
The Fianna Fáil candidate Jim Gavin will be in the capital this morning, with a canvass in Blackrock and Dún Laoghaire.
He also will be joined by party colleagues at other campaign events in south Dublin.
Barrister Maria Steen failed to secure enough support to join the race, securing 18 Oireachtas nominations when 20 was required.
After her campaign ended yesterday morning, Ms Steen told the media that “rarely has the political consensus seemed more oppressive or detached from the public’s wishes.”
However, Taoiseach Micheál Martin rejected suggestions that the failure of Ms Steen to secure a nomination was “anti-democratic”.
Voting takes place on 24 October. It is the smallest field in a Presidential Election since 1990.
Breaking News
China does targets differently to the West – and it may be just what the world needs
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There is something peculiar about the Chinese government that makes its targets very different to those in countries like Britain.
That quirk gives analysts some hope after it’s “timid” announcement on the green transition – and as Donald Trump yesterday condemned climate change as a “hoax”.
The good news is that China has, for the first time, made a commitment to cut its greenhouse gas emissions. It’s a landmark moment.
In a video statement to the UN in New York, President Xi Jinping vowed China would cut emissions by 7-10% by 2035, while “striving to do better”.
But it is still “critically short” of the roughly 30% believed to be necessary from the world’s biggest greenhouse gas polluter and clean tech superpower, analysts said.
Juan Manuel Santos, former president of Colombia and chair of The Elders, a group of global leaders founded by Nelson Mandela, said: “China’s latest climate target is too timid given the country’s extraordinary record on clean energy – both at home and through its green partnerships with emerging economies.”
Read more: Super typhoon hits China
China also chose not to say when it thinks its emissions will peak – allowing plenty of time for them to keep rising before they then fall.
But here’s why all is not lost – far from it.
In the West, targets are often aspirational. They are knowingly optimistic, sometimes wildly so, because the purpose isn’t necessarily to hit them.
Instead, they are designed to provide some certainty to investors, energy companies, local authorities and so on about where the country is headed, stimulating them all to kick into gear.
‘Taking targets seriously’
The Chinese work differently. In fact, they have a record over under promising and over delivering on climate targets.
Why?
“In China’s top-down political system, setting and evaluating targets is a key means through which the central government manages the country,” says Zhe Yao from Greenpeace Asia.
“As a result, there is a strong political culture of taking targets seriously. This mentality means policymakers usually take a realistic approach to setting targets rather than treating them as aspirations.”
Just look at their wind and solar rollout: meeting a target of 1,200GW by 2030 six years early.
Today they pledged to more than double today’s capacity of around 1,400GW to 3,600GW by 2035 – rates many countries can only dream of. There are other targets China has missed – such as to “strictly control” coal power – but still that record gives analysts hope.
Another ray of light is the fact that it was delivered by Xi himself – this is perceived as the commitment being more serious than if it was delivered by anyone else.
And “striving to better” sounds weasley, but suggests they aim to overachieve, and again should be taken more seriously from President Xi than perhaps we would from other leaders.
US and EU fall short
China is far from alone in disappointing with its pledge, made as a part of its latest five-year climate plan (known as nationally determined contribution or NDC), something all countries are doing this year as per the Paris Agreement.
The US government under Trump has ditched climate action altogether. The EU, which thinks of itself as ambitious, failed to come up with its own plan on time, effectively coming to the UN this week with an “I Owe You” instead.
With other leaders faltering, there was less heat on Beijing to step up.
Even the 10% reduction in emissions will “still put the world on a pathway to catastrophic climate impacts” says Kate Logan, director of the China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute.
So let’s hope this target will not just be hot air, but another one for cautious China to overachieve.
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