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Kenya
Tuesday, October 14, 2025
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Smith Smashes Eubank Jr To Defeat In Four Rounds

In what became a bitter grudge match, former WBO junior middleweight champion Liam “Beefy” Smith won on a fourth-round knockout against former IBO super middleweight champion Chris Eubank Jr. at the AO Arena in Manchester on Saturday night in a middleweight contest.

The time was 1 minute and 9 seconds.

There was nothing in it through the first three rounds with both boxers fighting cautiously.

However, in round four Smith dropped Eubank with a barrage of punches, but he managed to get up on unsteady legs.

Smith stepped in immediately and smashed Eubank to the canvas again as referee Victor Loughlin waved the fight off.

Eubank, who was the 3:1 favourite going into the fight, has a rematch clause if he wants it.

Smith improved his record 33-3-1; 20 and Eubank’s record dropped to 32-3-2; 23.

UNDERCARD

Richard Riakporhe 16-0; 12 ranked at No 2 IBF and the WBC No 5 cruiserweight, stopped former WBO champion Krzysztof Glowacki 32-4; 20 in the fourth round.

Riackporhe stunned Glowacki with a barrage of punches in the fourth round and referee Howard Foster stopped the fight at 2:44 into the round.

Former WBO heavyweight champion Joseph Parker 31-3; 21 won on points over ten rounds against Jack “One Smack” Massey 20-2; 11.

The scores were 96-93, 97-92 and 97-93.

In a welterweight bout, Ekow Essuman 19-0; 7 won on a majority 12-round points decision over Chris Kongo 14-2; 7.

Essuman retained the British, Commonwealth, IBF Euro and WBC International silver titles.

2020 Olympic super heavyweight bronze medallist Frazer Clarke 5-0; 4 won against Kevin Espindola 7-7; 2 who did not come for the fifth round due to a hand injury.

JONATHAN GUIDRY WINS AGAINST FORMER WBC CHAMPION

Heavyweight Johnathan “The King” Guidry 19-1-2; 10 won a ten-round unanimous points decision over former WBC heavyweight champion Bermane “B. WARE” Stiverne 25-6-1; 21 on Saturday night at Casino Miami Jai-Alai in Miami, Florida.

Guidry retained the WBA/NABA “gold title with scores of 100-91, 97-93 and 100-91.

Welterweight Tre’Sean Wiggins 15-5-3; 8 retained the NABA title on a ten-round unanimous points decision against Nigel Fennel 13-2, 8.

The scores were 99-91, 97-93 and 98-92.

In a toe-to-toe middleweight battle, Ian Green 17-2; 11 retained his WBA Continental Americas title on a ten-round split decision against Alexander Castro 11-1; 9.

The scores were 96-94 twice for Green and 96-94 for Castro.

Junior welterweight Raynel Mederos 8-0; 2 won against Nelson Morales 3-2; 0 with scores of 58-55, 58-55, 57-56.

Light heavyweight Kenmon Evans 10-0-1; 3 scored a six-round unanimous decision over Cleotis Pendarvis 21-14-2; 9. The scores were 60-54, 60-54, and 59-55.

Making his pro debut, middleweight Alex Esponda stopped Carlos Cruz 2-10, 1 in 74 seconds of the first round.

In his first pro fight, light heavyweight Brayan Leon Salgado needed just 58 seconds to stop Salome Flores Torres 1-8; 0.

Pro debuting junior welterweight Darian Castro outscored Ryan Schwartzberg 1-9-2; 1 over six rounds.

JACK CATTERALL VS JOSH TAYLOR POSTPONED AGAIN

The grudge rematch between WBO junior welterweight champion Josh Taylor and Jack Catterall has been postponed for the third time after Taylor suffered an injury to his foot.

Taylor won a controversial decision over Catterall in February last year in a bout for the undisputed world junior welterweight title.

Martha Karua Says The Truth Can Not Be Buried Ahead of Raila’s Kamukunji Rally

Narc-Kenya party leader Martha Karua has stated that the time had come to reveal the truth about the August 2022 general elections.

Taking to social media on Sunday, the Azimio la Umoja deputy presidential candidate in the 2022 polls stated that Kenyans have the right to know the truth about what happened at the polls.

“The truth shall not be forgotten, shall not and cannot be buried, the truth will always OUT ! The time is now,” she said on Twitter.

“As citizens, we have a right to information, the truth lies in the servers, those doubting the whistleblower’s data should demand servers be laid bare, we have to get to the bottom of this to free Kenya once and for all from electoral deceit,” she added.

She explained that IEBC as the duty bearer holds the records on behalf of Kenyans and they should make them public.

“IEBC as the duty bearer holds the records on our behalf. The records belong to us and ALL power is exercised by each and every office on our behalf, wherever you are, whoever you ARE listen and do what the constitution sanctions, lay bare the servers!” she added.

The statement comes just a day before Azimio leader Raila Odinga returns to Kenya from South Africa.

Raila has announced that he will issue a concise statement in response to claims made by a whistleblower that the presidential election on August 9, 2022, was rigged.

His spokesman, Dennis Onyango, said Raila will make the announcement upon his arrival from South Africa at a rally in Nairobi’s Kamukunji Grounds.

Raila is expected to arrive at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport at 11 a.m., according to Onyango, and then proceed to Kamkunji for the People’s Baraza.

“Upon arrival, Mr. Odinga will proceed to the Kamukunji grounds in Kamukunji Constituency for a People’s Baraza consultations with the public where they will discuss recent disclosures by a whistle-blower on the conduct of the 2022 general election,” part of the statement read.

Raila is in South Africa for a series of meetings in his capacity as the AU High Representative for Infrastructure Development in Africa.

US Media Rocked By Layoffs Amid Economic Gloom

From CNN to the Washington Post, US media are facing tough times, as a series of outlets have announced layoffs this winter amid fears of an economic downturn.

Vox Media, owner of the Vox and The Verge websites as well as the landmark New York Magazine and its online platforms, announced Friday it was letting go seven percent of its staff.

The news follows layoffs at CNN, NBC, MSNBC, Buzzfeed and other outlets.

In a memo to staff on Friday, Vox Media CEO Jim Bankoff announced “the difficult decision to eliminate roughly seven percent of our staff roles across departments due to the challenging economic environment impacting our business and industry.”

The memo, which was confirmed to AFP by Vox Media, said the affected employees were going to be notified of being let go within the next 15 minutes. That would mean some 130 out of the group’s 1,900 staff.

Meghan McCarron, an award-winning journalist who spent more than nine years at Eater, a food website owned by Vox Media, tweeted Friday she was among those laid off — while 37 weeks pregnant.

“My partner and I are so excited to become parents,” McCarron posted. “I can’t really process the amount of uncertainty we’re now facing,” she added.

A Vox spokesperson told AFP they could not comment on specific cases, but that employees were offered “competitive severance packages,” including extra severance pay for those with “a near-term upcoming parental leave planned.”

Journalists who were laid off from other organizations in recent weeks have also taken to Twitter to express anger, dismay, or gratitude to their colleagues, while beginning to look for a new job.

“I’ll be figuring out my next move. I’m a data reporter but I also write and produce,” tweeted Emily Siegel, who was let go after five years as an investigative reporter at NBC. “I’d love to keep doing this work. My (direct messages) are open.”

– ‘Under pressure for a long time’ –

While the media layoffs were not as dramatic as those rocking tech giants such as Microsoft and Google, which announced Friday it was cutting 12,000 more jobs, they were a consequence of falling advertising revenue amid a gloomy economic climate, said Chris Roush, dean of the School of Communications at Quinnipiac University in Connecticut.

“For a lot of them, they grew and expanded on the expectation that they were going to be able to grow their audience, or either readers or viewers to a certain level,”  Roush told AFP.”And that just hasn’t happened and is unlikely to happen given what’s happening in the economy.”

Newsroom employment has seen a steady decline in the United States, falling from 114,000 to 85,000 journalists between 2008 and 2020, according to a 2021 study by the Pew Research Center, with local media hit especially hard.

“Journalism has been under pressure for a long time, and a number of companies seem to think this is an opportune time to reduce their labor costs – hurting both journalists and journalism,” the Writers Guild of America, East said in a statement to AFP.

The union comprises journalists from NBC and MSNBC. The two outlets, which declined an AFP request for comment, bid farewell to some 75 employees, according to US media.

A similar announcement is dreaded at the Washington Post, where CEO Fred Ryan warned last month that “a number of positions” will be cut in the following weeks, adding that the layoffs would affect “a single digit percentage of our employee base” of some 2,500 people. Hires for other positions can continue, the paper said.

The Washington Post Magazine, the paper’s Sunday supplement which won two Pulitzer prizes, was shut down in December as part of what executive editor Sally Buzbee described in a memo as the paper’s “global and digital transformation.”

And Vice Media CEO Nancy Dubuc announced to her staff Friday that the company is up for sale.

– ‘Steep, secular decline’ –

In recent months, CNN has laid off an estimated several hundred workers out of a total of some 4,000 people, according to US media. CNN would not confirm those figures to AFP.

The cuts took place as the company underwent a restructuring following a merger between Warner Media, which includes CNN and HBO Max, and Discovery. The merger resulted in the creation of the Warner Bros. Discovery mega conglomerate.

Following the merger, CNN’s new parent company abruptly pulled the plug on the network’s $100 million streaming service CNN+.

Naveen Sarma, a senior media analyst with S&P Global Rating, noted a “steep, secular decline” of traditional broadcast and cable television in the United States, leading to a dramatic drop in subscriptions to paid TV.

“That’s a constant ongoing struggle for all these companies to come in,” said Sarma.

Roush of Quinnipiac University says the changes were especially painful for smaller media.

“CNN, Washington Post, those are not going away, but a smaller company, they have bigger issues, because they’re just smaller and not as well established as a media brand,” he said.

John Legend And Chrissy Teigen Welcome Daughter

Chrissy Teigen and John Legend have welcomed a new child.

“She’s here!” Teigen shared in an Instagram post showing the couple’s older children, Luna and Miles, holding their baby sister on Thursday.

The family’s new addition is named Esti Maxine Stephens. (Legend’s birth name is John Roger Stephens.)

The couple have been married since 2013 after meeting on one of Legend’s music video sets.

Teigen and Legend announced they were expecting in August 2022, with Teigen noting “the last few years have been a blur of emotions to say the least, but joy has filled our home and hearts again.”

Teigen experienced pregnancy loss in 2020, and she later wrote about it in an emotional essay.

The cookbook author added in her post that Legend “sheds nightly tears of joy seeing Luna and Miles full of love.”

“The house is bustling and our family could not be happier,” Teigen said.

Nigeria Sets Date For First Census In 17 Years

Nigeria will start its first national census in 17 years at the end of March, as authorities in Africa’s most populous country seek updated data on the exact population and the size of different ethnic groups, an official said late on Friday.

Nigeria’s estimated population is more than 200 million and the United Nations expects that to double by 2050. That would make Nigeria the world’s third most populous country, overtaking the United States.

Census figures in Nigeria affect the sharing of oil revenues and political representation among the 36 states and 300 ethnic groups. Previous counts were discredited after disputes among the three main groups, the Fulani, Yoruba and Igbo.

Nasir Isah Kwarra, chairman of the National Population Commission, told reporters census counting would be conducted from March 29 to April 2, more than a month after Nigerians go to the polls to vote for a new president.

Nigeria initially planned the census in 2021 but authorities postponed the process on the grounds of widespread insecurity, especially in the north where an Islamist insurgency and kidnappings for ransom have been raging.

Brazil’s Lula Sacks Army Commander After Anti-Government Riots

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva sacked the commander of Brazil’s army Saturday, two weeks after an election-denying mob loyal to his far-right predecessor ransacked the halls of power in Brasilia.

The veteran leftist’s dismissal of Julio Cesar de Arruda came a day before Lula was to make his first trip abroad — to Argentina — as he moves to put the South American powerhouse back on the international stage.

Arruda had only taken up the post on December 30, two days before the end of outgoing president Jair Bolsonaro’s term, and was confirmed by Lula’s administration in early January.

On January 8, Bolsonaro supporters ransacked the presidential palace, Supreme Court and Congress in Brasilia, breaking windows and furniture, destroying priceless works of art, and leaving graffiti messages calling for a military coup.

Lula has said he suspects security forces may have been involved in the riots, in which more than 2,000 people were arrested. The leftist president announced a review of his immediate environment.

Defense Minister Jose Mucio said Saturday evening after meeting with the president that Arruda was out as head of the army because of “a break in the level of confidence.”

“We thought we needed to stop this in order to get over this episode,” Mucio said, alluding to the attack in Brasilia.

Mucio said Friday after a meeting with Lula and the chiefs of the three branches of the military that there was no direct armed forces involvement in the riots.

On Wednesday, the man named to be the new army chief, Tomas Ribeiro Paiva, until now the head of the southeastern army command, vowed that the military “will continue to guarantee democracy.” And he suggested that the results of the October election in which Lula defeated Bolsonaro should be accepted.

On Sunday Lula will head to Argentina, the customary first stop for Brazilian presidents. Beyond tradition, however, the trip will also allow him to meet with a faithful ally, President Alberto Fernandez, as well as regional counterparts at the summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC).

“Everyone wants to talk to Brazil,” Lula said this week in an interview with the Globo TV channel, promising to rebuild Brasilia’s ties with the international community after Bolsonaro’s four years in office were marked by international isolation for the country.

Latin America is only the initial phase of his international push, with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz paying a visit on January 30, and Lula headed to Washington to meet with his US counterpart Joe Biden on February 10.

Lula’s priority is to “reconnect with Latin America” after ties with neighbors in the region were “relegated to the backburner,” Joao Daniel Almeida, a foreign relations specialist at Pontifical University in Rio de Janeiro, told AFP.

Lula arrives in Buenos Aires on Sunday and will meet with Fernandez the following day. The center-left Argentine leader has already traveled to Brazil for a bilateral meeting, held on January 2, the day after Lula took office.

Discussion is expected to include trade, science, technology and defense, Brazil’s foreign ministry said.

– Pink tide –

Brazil’s 77-year-old leader could also meet several leftist counterparts on Tuesday in Buenos Aires — Cuba’s Miguel Diaz Canel and Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro, with whom Brasilia has recently normalized ties — who will all be attending a regional summit.

Under Bolsonaro, Brazil was one of fifty countries that recognized Maduro’s main opponent, Juan Guaido, as interim president of the country.

In Buenos Aires, the CELAC summit aims to bring together more than 30 states from the region. Lula, who served two previous terms as president from 2003 to 2010, was one of the founders of the group, formed when a so-called “pink tide” of left-leaning governments washed over Latin America.

With a number of leftist leaders having recently come to power, the region’s constantly see-sawing political map once again resembles that of the early 2000s.

Bolsonaro, a harsh critic of the left, suspended Brazil’s participation in CELAC, alleging the body “gave importance to non-democratic regimes such as those of Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua.”

He also failed to establish warm ties with Argentina, Bolivia, Chile and Colombia, where the left had come to power.

Foreign relations specialist Almeida said that Lula wants to “prioritize economic cooperation” in the region.

Lula also expressed this week his interest in a regional policy for the preservation of the Amazon, as the international community waits with bated breath for changes following Bolsonaro’s strong record of increased deforestation.

Struggling Pig Kills Butcher At Slaughterhouse

A butcher attempting to slaughter a struggling pig in a Hong Kong slaughterhouse died after suffering a wound from a meat cleaver, authorities said on Friday.

According to police, the incident occurred at the Sheung Shui Slaughterhouse at around 1 pm, local media reported. The butcher (61) had subdued the animal with an electric stun gun, but the animal regained consciousness and knocked him to the ground.

The butcher sustained a wound from a 15-inch meat cleaver, as per CNN report.

A co-worker found the man unconscious with the cleaver in his hand and a wound on his left foot. He was taken to an area hospital, where he was later pronounced dead.

Police said the man’s cause of death has not been determined, and the city’s Labour Department is investigating the accident.

“The Labour Department is saddened by the death of the person and expresses its deepest sympathy to his family,” CNN quoted the agency as saying.

“We will complete the investigation as soon as possible to identify the cause of the accident, ascertain the liability of the duty holders, and recommend improvement measures. We will take actions pursuant to the law if there is any violation of the work safety legislation,” it added.

Musk Announces More Expensive Subscription For Ad-Free Twitter

Twitter boss Elon Musk announced in a series of tweets Saturday that the company’s subscription service would show less advertising to users, including an ad-free tier.

The announcement comes as the social network has faced major economic uncertainty since its takeover by Musk in October.

“Ads are too frequent on Twitter and too big. Taking steps to address both in coming weeks,” Musk posted to his Twitter account Saturday.

And for those who choose it, “there will be a higher priced subscription that allows zero ads,” Musk added.

That would be a radical change in business model from Twitter, which has so far relied on targeted advertising to generate revenue, before launching a paid subscription service in mid-December.

But advertising has been a question mark for Twitter lately, after Musk fired about half of the company’s 7,500-strong workforce late last year. The move sparked concern that the company was insufficiently staffed to carry out content moderation and spooking governments and advertisers.

Musk said his strategy was to massively reduce costs while building up revenue, and that a new subscription service called Twitter Blue, which grants users a sought-after blue verification tick for a fee, would help reach that goal.

The service costs $11 a month in the United States and is available on Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android mobile operating systems, according to a page on the company’s website.

Web subscriptions are also available for $8 per month or, at a discount, $84 per year.

Twitter Blue is currently available in the United States, Canada, Britain, New Zealand, Australia and Japan.

Musk-led Twitter has been riven by chaos, with mass layoffs, the return of banned accounts and the suspension of journalists critical of the South African-born billionaire.

Musk’s takeover also saw a surge in racist or hateful tweets, drawing scrutiny from regulators and chasing away big advertisers, Twitter’s main source of revenue.

Founder Of Egypt’s Juhayna Food Industries And His Son Released From Prison

The founder and former chief executive of Juhayna Food Industries and his son were released from prison in Egypt on Saturday.

Safwan and Seifeldin Thabet spent about two years in detention for allegedly supporting a terrorist group in a case that shook the business community as well as Egyptian and foreign investors.

Juhayna, a listed company, is the country’s largest dairy products and juices producer.

After security and prison sources as well as a family member told Reuters about the men’s release, photos posted on social media showed them joyfully embracing relatives after returning home.

The pair were detained for allegedly belonging to and financing an unidentified terrorist group believed to be the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, according to state media.

The Thabet family have denied any wrongdoing.

The two men were never convicted.

There was no immediate official statement from the authorities about the release.

A member of the Thabet family told Reuters the two men were released from a police station and returned home, but said the family had no other information about why they were freed.

A prison source told Reuters that the case against them had not been closed.

Safwan Thabet, Juhayna’s founder and former chief executive, was detained in December 2020. His son took over before he too was detained in February 2021.

The family had pleaded for their release partly due to the illness of Safwan Thabet’s wife, who died during his detention.

Buzz Aldrin, Second Man On The Moon, Marries On 93rd Birthday

Legendary Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, the second person to set foot on the Moon, said he had married his longtime girlfriend on Friday, his 93rd birthday.

Aldrin and Anca Faur, executive vice president of Buzz Aldrin Ventures, were wed in a private ceremony.

“On my 93rd birthday… I am pleased to announce that my longtime love Dr. Anca Faur & I have tied the knot,” Aldrin tweeted along with pictures of himself and Faur, who is reportedly 63.

“We were joined in holy matrimony in a small private ceremony in Los Angeles & are as excited as eloping teenagers.”

According to her LinkedIn profile, Faur earned a doctorate in chemical engineering from the University of Pittsburgh in 1996 and had previously worked for Union Carbide and Johnson Matthey before joining Buzz Aldrin Ventures. She had also served as treasurer for the California Hydrogen Business Council.

Aldrin’s three previous marriages ended in divorce.

The US astronaut is the last surviving member of the Apollo 11 mission, during which he and Neil Armstrong become the first people to set foot on the Moon, on July 20, 1969.

Michael Collins, who piloted the command module while his crewmates walked on the lunar surface, died in April 2021 and Armstrong died in 2012.

Since retiring from NASA in 1971, Aldrin has remained a strong advocate of space exploration.

A crater on the Moon near the Apollo 11 landing site is named in his honor.

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