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Prince Harry Prince William News LIVE | Prince Harry-William Feud Overshadows Coronation | UK News – CNN-News18

  1. Prince Harry Prince William News LIVE | Prince Harry-William Feud Overshadows Coronation | UK News CNN-News18
  2. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Had to Wait for Confirmation That They’d Be Invited to the Coronation InStyle
  3. New Prince Harry And Meghan Markle Drama As Estranged Royals Made To Wait For Coronation Invite TalkTV
  4. The Royals Decided Not to Give Prince Harry a Coronation Role Because It Would “Complicate” Things Yahoo Life
  5. ‘Major concerns’ around Prince Harry’s security at Coronation Sky News Australia
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Ukraine denounces deadly missile strike as war overshadows G20 meeting

  • At least 23 killed in Russian attack: Ukrainian officials
  • Russia denies targeting civilians
  • Yellen slams Russian officials at G20 meeting
  • Nations pledge to cooperate on war crimes investigations

VINNYTSIA, Ukraine, July 15 (Reuters) – Senior Western officials directly accused their Russian counterparts of war crimes on Friday after Russian missiles struck a Ukrainian city far behind the frontlines in an attack Kyiv officials said killed at least 23 people.

Ukraine said Thursday’s strike on Vinnytsia, a city of 370,000 people about 200 km (125 miles) southwest of the capital Kyiv, had been carried out with Kalibr cruise missiles launched from a Russian submarine in the Black Sea.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called Russia a “terrorist” state, urged more sanctions against the Kremlin and said the death toll in Vinnytsia could rise.

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“Unfortunately, this is not the final number. Debris clearance continues. Dozens of people are reported missing. There are seriously injured (people) among those hospitalised,” he said in a video address.

Zelenskiy told an international conference aimed at prosecuting war crimes in Ukraine that the attack had been mounted on “an ordinary, peaceful city”.

“No other state in the world poses such a terrorist threat as Russia,” Zelenskiy said.

Russia reiterated that it does not target civilians in what it calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine, and said its attack struck a military training facility. Reuters could not independently verify battlefield accounts.

Vinnytsia hosts the command headquarters of the Ukrainian Air Force, according to an official Ukrainian military website, a target which Russia used cruise missiles to try to hit in March, the Ukrainian air force said at the time. read more

Ukraine’s state emergency service said three children, including a 4-year-old girl named Lisa, were killed in Thursday’s attack. Another 71 people were hospitalised and 29 others were missing.

It posted a photograph on its Telegram channel of a toy kitten, a toy dog and flowers lying in the grass. “The little girl Lisa, killed by the Russians today, has become a ray of sunshine,” it said.

The attack overshadowed the start of a meeting of G20 finance ministers in Indonesia on Friday, where the top U.S. and Canadian representatives accused Russian officials in attendance of culpability in atrocities.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen condemned Russia’s “brutal and unjust war” and said Russian finance officials shared responsibility. read more

“By starting this war, Russia is solely responsible for negative spillovers to the global economy, particularly higher commodity prices,” she said.

Russian officials participating in the meeting were “adding to the horrific consequences of this war through their continued support of the Putin regime”, she added.

“You share responsibility for the innocent lives lost and the ongoing human and economic toll that the war is causing around the world,” she said, addressing the Russian officials.

Canadian Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland told Russian officials at the meeting that she held them personally responsible for “war crimes”, a Western official told Reuters.

As Russia pressed its offensive in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region, the United States and more than 40 other countries agreed on Thursday to coordinate investigations into suspected war crimes. read more

GHOST TOWN

The war in Ukraine has sent prices soaring for grains, cooking oils, fuel and fertiliser, stoking a global food crisis. Negotiators hope a deal will be signed next week. read more

The United States took steps on Thursday to facilitate Russian food and fertiliser exports by reassuring banks, shipping and insurance companies that such transactions would not breach Washington’s sanctions on Moscow. read more

Enabling those Russian exports is a key part of attempts by the United Nations and Turkey to broker a package deal with Moscow that would unlock a blockade on the Black Sea port of Odesa to allow for shipments of Ukrainian grain. read more

The Kremlin has said that Russia is ready to halt what the West calls Moscow’s unprovoked war of aggression if Kyiv agrees to its conditions, including formally recognising Russia’s control of Crimea, annexed by Moscow in 2014, and the independence of two self-proclaimed Russian-backed statelets in eastern Ukraine.

Ukraine has repeatedly said it is unwilling to concede any territory and will take back any land lost by force.

The eastern Ukrainian town of Popasna that fell to Russian forces two months ago is now a ghost town with little sign of life. read more

A Reuters reporter who visited the town on Thursday found it almost deserted, with nearly all apartment buildings destroyed or heavily damaged.

Former resident Vladimir Odarchenko stood inside his damaged home and surveyed the debris strewn across the floor.

“I have no idea what I’m going to do. Where to live? I don’t know,” he said.

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Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Cynthia Osterman and Stephen Coates; Editing by Aurora Ellis & Simon Cameron-Moore

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Jaden Ivey’s injury overshadows Detroit Pistons’ Summer League victory over Wizards

Las Vegas — The outcome of the game wasn’t as important as the status report on first-round pick Jaden Ivey. It’s always scary when a player lands awkwardly on a play. When it’s a top draft pick, it’s intensified.

Jaden Ivey, the No. 5 overall pick, suffered an ankle injury after attempting a 3-pointer in the first quarter of Saturday’s Summer League matchup against the Washington Wizards. He hobbled to the locker room and did not return to play, though he did return to the bench in the second half.

Pistons Summer League coach Jordan Brink said there hasn’t been an update on Ivey’s status, but the concern level doesn’t seem to be high about the long-term outlook.

“I don’t think (we’re) too concerned, but I have to talk (the medical staff) about it,” Brink said. “I haven’t talked to them yet.”  

The Pistons were cruising in the first half but had to hold on in the fourth quarter for a 105-99 victory at Thomas & Mack Center.

The injury bug is hitting the roster hard, as Ivey (right ankle) and Saben Lee (left ankle) didn’t return to the game, and Killian Hayes didn’t play.

The Pistons (2-0) had enough depth to withstand the injuries, with Isaiah Livers leading the way with 20 points and five rebounds. Braxton Key added 14 points, seven rebounds and four assists and Isaiah Stewart 14 points and nine rebounds.

“I thought we moved about ball really well. We had 23 assists, and that was a point of emphasis to get off the ball. I thought we dribbled it and pounded it a bit too much last game,” Brink said. “We did a really good job playing with the point-five mentality, moving the ball and generating open looks.

“We made 14 threes and shot almost 50% from 3. I thought it was just the ball movement and just the mentality of good-to-great passes.”

After building a 27-point lead in the first half and looking to put the game away, the Wizards chipped away at the lead behind Jordan Schakel (24 points) and Jordan Goodwin (20 points and five rebounds). 

The Wizards (0-1) got within 91-90 with 3:44 left on a pair of free throws by first-round pick Johnny Davis, but Stewart answered with a 3-pointer. Schakel hit a 3-pointer to cut the lead to one again, but Key scored on a back-door cut off a nifty pass from Jalen Duren (13 points and six rebounds) and Livers added a 3-pointer to push the lead back to six with 1:50 remaining.

Washington followed with a jumper by Goodwin and a pair of free throws from Schakel to make it 99-97, but Stewart had a tip-in and Livers added two free throws to give the Pistons some breathing room.

The concern about Ivey was at the forefront, though.

“I was upset for him because he’s a competitor. If you saw it, he tried to stay in. I was telling him, ‘Bro, get off the court and get that checked out,’ ” Livers said. “He’s a great player, great kid and talented but off the court, he’s a great teammate already.

“He’s already making that impression that he’s going to be one of the best teammates already, so I support him 1,000% and I hope his ankle’s fine.”

On the play, Ivey landed on the defender’s foot and was writhing on the court for a few seconds. He got up and slammed the scorer’s table in frustration after the injury. After hobbling around for a few more seconds, he was examined by the medical staff.

The defender was called for a flagrant foul, and Ivey stayed in the game and made all three free throws, then headed to the locker room for further examination.

Ivey was having a solid first quarter, with 11 points, including a 3-pointer, a three-point play and five free throws.

“I thought you saw him a little bit more comfortable at the start of the game, already from Game 1 to Game 2, just the pace,” Brink said. “We wanted to give him a little bit more space to operate and use his quickness. I thought you already saw the game slowing down a little bit for him.”

Pistons rookie Jalen Duren on his first NBA experience in Summer League

Jalen Duren has had two impressive games as he’s helped the Pistons to a 2-0 start.

Rod Beard, The Detroit News

Rod.Beard@detroitnews.com

Twitter.com: @detnewsRodBeard

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Roman Abramovich: Death and destruction in Ukraine overshadows Russian oligarch’s legacy at Chelsea

Bloody conflict in Ukraine and international outrage over Russia’s invasion placed a renewed focus on Abramovich and his ownership of Chelsea.

It’s a focus that has shone a light on the jarring friction between sport and politics: Abramovich the dream-realizing football owner — adored by much of the Chelsea fanbase — versus Abramovich the Russian oligarch.

Days after the war began, as the West responded by imposing sanctions on Russia and its oligarchs, Abramovich’s assets — including Chelsea — appeared increasingly vulnerable to a more punitive financial environment and he soon announced his plans to sell the club.

Chelsea will be somewhat shielded from the sanctions, allowed to continue fulfilling its fixtures under a special license. But it does mean the club is not able to sell merchandise or tickets to upcoming games, engage in the transfer market, or issue new contracts to players while under the ownership of Abramovich.
Last month British lawmaker Chris Bryant called for Abramovich to lose ownership of Chelsea after seeing a leaked 2019 UK Home Office document that flagged concerns the 55-year-old had “links to the Russian state and his public association with corrupt activity and practices,” the MP said in Parliament.
According to Reuters, Abramovich has been granted Portuguese and Israeli citizenship in recent years.

“Surely, Mr. Abramovich should no longer be able to own a football club in this country?” Bryant said.

Abramovich’s representative did not respond to CNN’s request for comment on the oligarch being sanctioned.

Spurred by Abramovich’s enormous financial investment — upwards of $1.99 billion according to respected football business blogger Swiss Ramble — Chelsea has enjoyed an unprecedented period of success since his $233 million acquisition of the club in June 2003.
“I don’t want to throw my money away,” Abramovich told the BBC following the takeover, “but it’s really about having fun and that means success and trophies.”

During the 19 years under Abramovich, the club has collected 21 major trophies, according to Chelsea. After winning the FIFA Club World Cup in Abu Dhabi last month, Chelsea has officially won ever major trophy at the club’s disposal.

‘Thank you Mr Abramovich’

It is gratitude for this golden era that underpinned a sweeping tide of adulation for the oligarch upon the announcement of his impending sale of the club, among fans as well as former players.

“The best,” former captain John Terry tweeted, accompanied by a picture of him and Abramovich celebrating another Premier League triumph in 2017.

A statement from the Chelsea Supporters Trust (CST) board encapsulated the broader outpouring of feeling among the club’s fans on social media, thanking Abramovich for “his affection, passion and dedication” during a tenure that brought “unparalleled success.”

“Chelsea supporters will never forget all he has done for our club. Thank you Mr Abramovich,” the statement added, published before the UK government announced the sanctions.

According to Richard Weekes, who is one of the founders of Chelsea supporters’ group ‘We Are The Shed,’ “the Roman Empire” helped realize supporters’ wildest dreams.

“The last 20 years has enabled Chelsea supporters to live their best lives,” Weekes told CNN before Abramovich would be sanctioned.

“Traveling around the world winning and celebrating the biggest prizes in football, you simply cannot ask for more than that and, for that reason, Roman will forever have a place in all Chelsea supporters’ hearts.

“To have ‘the Roman Empire’ come to an end with Chelsea as ‘Champions of the World’ could not be a more fitting conclusion to this chapter in our history.”

‘Scorched air’

If the last 19 years have been jam-packed with golden memories and trophy after trophy, the coming days and months look more uncertain.

In light of the sanctions placed on Abramovich and the consequential impact on Chelsea, the club released a statement confirming it would seek “permission for the licence to be amended in order to allow the Club to operate as normal as possible.”

Amid such turmoil, the CST called for the voices of supporters to be heard.

“Supporters MUST be involved in any conversation regarding ongoing impacts on the club and its global fanbase,” the group said in a statement on Twitter.

“The CST implores the Government to conduct a swift process to minimise the uncertainty over Chelsea’s future, for supporters and for supporters to be given a golden share as part of a sale of the club.”

The sanctions also prevent a sale of the club, pending the issuance of a special license.

In his initial statement published on the club’s website before he was sanctioned, Abramovich said the net proceeds from the sale will be donated to a foundation set up “for the benefit of all victims of the war in Ukraine.”

That statement was conspicuously vague regarding who specifically might be a victim; Abramovich’s critics pointed out that the wording could also allow his new foundation to support the families of Russian soldiers.

“Roman Abramovich is very sensitive to what is happening now,” Mikhail Khordokovsky, an exiled oligarch and Putin critic, told CNN before the recent sanctions were announced.

“I don’t have any information, but I can’t imagine that he’s made any decision without first consulting with Putin.

“Regardless, this means that he’s gotten a whiff of scorched air. What he smells is the fire burning under President Putin,” Khodorkovsky said, referring to Abramovich’s plans to sell Chelsea.

In 2018 the US Treasury released the names of 210 prominent Russians, dubbed the “Putin list.”

The administration was required to name the companies and individuals and consider whether to sanction them under legislation meant to punish Russia for its interference in the 2016 US election, as well as its human rights violations, annexation of Crimea, and ongoing military operations in eastern Ukraine.

The list, which included Abramovich, reads like the US has “simply rewritten the Kremlin’s phone book,” said Russian senator Konstantin Kosachev in a Facebook post at the time.

But if Abramovich’s current wealth and apparent safety in Russia reflect an affinity with Putin, that may have been what put him at risk with the UK government.

“He is one of the few oligarchs from the 1990s to maintain prominence under Putin. None of our allies have yet sanctioned Abramovich,” the UK government said in a statement on Thursday. Canada have since sanctioned Abramovich too.
Abramovich made his fortune in steel and investments, taking advantage of the mass privatization that characterized Boris Yeltsin’s premiership following the fall of the Soviet Union.
Abramovich’s wealth, valued at $14.5 billion in 2022 by Forbes, led to influence within Russian political circles as he was first elected to the State Duma and then appointed governor of Chukotka from 2000 to 2008.

A nervous future

While Weekes admitted that the incoming owner’s status as an oligarch had played on his mind back in 2003, he added that fans would have had little power to reverse the takeover regardless of their feelings.

“Chelsea fans did not choose to be bought,” Weekes said, “it is unlikely any pushback would have changed the decision at the time had we stopped to think about the morality behind it.

“Today people are more prepared to look into things a little deeper, to understand right from wrong and, with regards to a football club, have the desire to know that who is representing their team suits their ideologies and beliefs. This is a good thing.

“Only time will tell if our feeling towards his character will change but, for now, there is no denying the happiness he brought to Chelsea supporters during his time here and for that we are thankful.”

This schism between appreciation and criticism manifested itself in Chelsea’s league fixtures at Burnley on March 5 and at Norwich City on March 10.

As a minute’s applause was held in tribute to Ukraine before the Burnley game, chants of Abramovich’s name could be heard on a Sky Sports broadcast before being drowned out by boos from the stands.

The chants drew reproach from Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel after the game.

“If we show solidarity, we show solidarity and we should do it together. We take the knee together, if an important person from other clubs or from our club unfortunately dies, we show a minute of respect,” Tuchel told reporters after the game, which Chelsea won 4-0.

“It’s not the moment to give other messages, it’s a moment to show respect. We do this because this is what we are also as a club, we show respect as a club. We need our fans to commit to this minute of applause in the moment.

“We do it for Ukraine, there is no second opinion about the situation there. They have our thoughts and our support, and we should stand together as a club.”

Beyond this mixture of sentiment among fans is an equally strong feeling of anxiety. Rumors of potential buyers continue to abound, but as yet it remains to be seen when the club’s future will be clarified.

Who will the new owner be? Will they be capable or willing to invest the same funds as Abramovich? Would they try to move Chelsea away from Stamford Bridge?

After almost two decades of looking ahead to nothing but success, these questions and more have Weekes’ mind “whirling.”

“In the end Roman explicitly outlined that owning Chelsea was never for financial gain, will the new owner fell that way? Unlikely,” Weekes said.

“That is worrying, as, on top of everything, it might be the supporters that end up paying the price.”



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Deion Sanders victorious in Jackson State coaching debut as postgame theft confusion overshadows win

Deion Sanders won his college head coaching debut on Sunday as Jackson State trounced Edward Waters of the NAIA level 53-0. But the game was quickly overshadowed by confusion over whether Sanders was robbed during the game, and it turned out he was not even though he was convinced otherwise immediately after the game.

Sanders ranted to reporters in his postgame press conference about someone he believed stole his belongings out of the coaches office during the game, alleging his credit card, wallet, watches and phone were all taken. He used the incident to illustrate how “when I talk about quality and raising the standards, that goes for everyone, man, not just the people on the field, not just the coaches, not just the teachers, not just the faculty. But that’s everybody. Security and everybody.”

News of the allegation spread quickly, and Sanders claimed it was the second time he’s been robbed since taking the FCS job in Jackson, Mississippi. Within an hour of Sanders’ long-winded rant about the matter, however, Jackson State officials told Sports Illustrated’s Ross Dellenger that his belongings were not stolen and had only been misplaced after being moved for safekeeping. Noah Newman of WJTV in Jackson reported that all of Sanders’ stuff was found in his locker/office.

The bizarre incident capped off the beginning to what figures to be a fascinating tenure for Sanders at the HBCU which competes in the SWAC of the FCS level. The FCS season moved to the spring this year amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Tigers are scheduled to play a seven-game regular season slate. Sanders, who has drawn attention to the Jackson State program with his status as a former NFL and MLB superstar, will need to put Sunday’s misunderstanding behind him quickly. The Tigers are set to host in-state rival Mississippi Valley State on Saturday, and it should be a much tougher game than Sunday’s romp against an overmatched foe from one of the sport’s lowest tiers.

“How do you think it feels?” Sanders said before the incident was resolved. “Coming back after just teary-eyed because the guys presented me with the game ball. One of the best moments I’ve ever had in my professional sports career emotionally. Then you go into your locker room and your coaches office … and you notice that you don’t even have a phone to call your momma, to call your girl, to call your kids because it’s been stolen.”

Sanders eventually said “let’s flush that” and began to talk about the game. But before that, he made clear that “we’re going to find out who did it.” Iff Sanders wanted more attention on the beginning of his rebuilding job at Jackson State, Sunday’s bizarre postgame mixup certainly brought some, and he left the incident with some element of mystery still surrounding it by posting the following to Twitter on Sunday night.

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