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Lamine Yamal misses penalty as Girona defeat Barca in derby

Lamine Yamal missed a penalty as Barcelona spurned the chance to return to the top of La Liga, falling to defeat in a fiery Catalan derby against Girona.

Hansi Flick’s side now trail arch rivals Real Madrid by two points in the title race after substitute Fran Beltran struck in the 86th minute at Estadio Montilivi to snatch all three points and ease relegation fears for the home side.

The visitors thought defender Jules Kounde had been fouled in the build-up to the winner, but after a brief video assistant referee (VAR) check the goal was given.

The hosts were reduced to 10 men midway through stoppage time, with substitute Joel Roca bringing down Lamine Yamal with a lunging challenge.

Yet Barcelona were unable to force an equaliser as they succumbed to just a third league defeat against their regional rivals.

The result marks a second loss in succession for Barcelona, who suffered a 4-0 hammering by Atletico Madrid in the first leg of their Copa del Rey semi-final on Thursday.

It was a fiercely fought contest from the off as the hosts took the game to the league leaders, forcing keeper Joan Garcia into a save inside the first minute.

By contrast Barcelona were lethargic, spurning several gilt-edged chances to take the lead. Lamine Yamal was the main culprit, twice missing from close range before crashing a penalty off the base of the upright in first-half stoppage time.

In the end two defenders combined to break the deadlock on 59 minutes. Centre-back Pau Cubarsi looped a header into the top corner from right-back Kounde’s cross for his first league goal in Barcelona colours.

The visitors’ joy was short-lived though, as Girona hit back two minutes later when midfielder Thomas Lemar tapped home Vladyslav Vanat’s centre for his second goal in as many games.

The hosts scored again 10 minutes later as Garcia failed to claim Viktor Tsygankov’s speculative header, though the goalkeeper was awarded a foul for a shove from Roca on the goalline.

The victory ends a three-game winless run for Girona, who move up to 12th, five points clear of the relegation zone.

Barcelona’s league winning run ends at three games, and they face a possible five-point gap at the summit come their next fixture – Real Madrid head to Osasuna on Saturday (17:30 GMT), before Barca host Levante on Sunday (15:15).

Williamson returns for World Cup qualifiers

England captain Leah Williamson returns to the squad for the first time since Euro 2025 as they prepare to begin their 2027 Women’s World Cup qualifying campaign.

Williamson, 28, missed England’s friendly victories over China, Ghana and Australia as well as their defeat by Brazil at the end of 2025 due to a knee injury.

The Arsenal defender had surgery after lifting England’s second successive European title in July and returned to action at the start of December.

Several big names return to the squad including Chelsea forward Lauren James, Manchester City defender Alex Greenwood and goalkeeper Hannah Hampton.

James, 24, was absent for four months with an ankle injury before returning in November and is now back to full fitness.

She impressed in Sunday’s win over Liverpool and boosts manager Sarina Wiegman’s attacking options with Arsenal’s Beth Mead out with a fractured shin.

Greenwood, 32, missed the start of the season with a knee injury while Hampton had a thigh issue which ruled her out of the November camp.

There is a first senior call-up for London City Lionesses defender Poppy Pattinson, while uncapped 20-year-old Freya Godfrey retains her place in the squad.

Aston Villa goalkeeper Ellie Roebuck also earns a recall, with Manchester City’s Khiara Keating dropping out of the squad.

England are without Manchester United midfielder Ella Toone, who is out with a hip injury until the end of March.

Bay FC defender Anouk Denton, 22, who made her debut as a late substitute in December, is not included in the squad.

The Lionesses travel to Turkey to face Ukraine on Tuesday, 3 March (17:00 GMT) before hosting Iceland at the City Ground on Saturday, 7 March (12:30).

They are the first competitive games since England’s success in Switzerland and they will meet reigning world champions Spain later in their qualifying group.

There are eight international windows before England hope to travel to Brazil for the World Cup between 24 June and 25 July 2027.

“It’s a new year with new objectives as we start our qualification journey with these two very important fixtures against Ukraine and Iceland,” said Wiegman.

“This is new opposition for this England team, so that’s exciting too. I am looking forward to being back with the squad and getting back to work.”

Full England squad

Goalkeepers: Hannah Hampton (Chelsea), Anna Moorhouse (Orlando Pride), Ellie Roebuck (Aston Villa)

Defenders: Lucy Bronze (Chelsea), Jess Carter (Gotham), Grace Fisk (Liverpool), Alex Greenwood (Manchester City), Lotte Wubben-Moy (Arsenal), Maya Le Tissier (Manchester United), Esme Morgan (Washington Spirit), Taylor Hinds (Arsenal), Poppy Pattinson (London City Lionesses), Leah Williamson (Arsenal)

Midfielders: Grace Clinton (Manchester City), Georgia Stanway (Bayern Munich), Keira Walsh (Chelsea), Laura Blindkilde Brown (Manchester City), Lucia Kendell (Aston Villa)

Forwards: Chloe Kelly (Arsenal), Lauren James (Chelsea), Aggie Beever-Jones (Chelsea), Alessia Russo (Arsenal), Lauren Hemp (Manchester City), Freya Godfrey (London City Lionesses), Jess Park (Manchester United)

US Civil Rights Activist Jesse Jackson Dies Aged 84.

United States civil rights leader Reverend Jesse Jackson has died aged 84.

Jackson “died peacefully” on Tuesday morning, a statement from his family said.

Jackson’s family announced his death, hailing “his unwavering belief in justice, equality, and love uplifted millions”.

He had a three-pronged career of civil rights, liberal missions and political activism, and his two White House bids in the 1980s helped lay the groundwork for the election of America’s first Black president two decades later.

As a close associate of Martin Luther King Jr in the 1960s, a dynamic Black orator and a successful mediator in international disputes, the longtime Baptist minister expanded the space for African Americans on the national stage for more than six decades.

Jackson was present for many consequential moments in the long battle for racial justice in the United States.

He was with King in Memphis in 1968 when the civil rights leader was slain; openly wept in the crowd as Barack Obama celebrated his 2008 presidential election; and stood with George Floyd’s family in 2021 after a court convicted an ex-police officer of the unarmed Black man’s murder.

“My constituency is the desperate, the damned, the disinherited, the disrespected, and the despised,” Jackson told the 1984 Democratic National Convention.

He rose to prominence in the 1960s as a leader in King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

He launched two social justice and activism organisations: Operation PUSH in 1971, and the National Rainbow Coalition a dozen years later. The two groups merged in 1996.

It was Jackson’s presidential runs – and one 1988 speech – that caught many Americans’ attention and ensured that African American issues became fundamental to the Democratic Party platform.

His debut White House campaign supported a massive jobs expansion, ending the nation’s “war on drugs” and its mandatory minimum sentences for drug users, and improving equality for women and minorities.

Jackson finished third in the 1984 Democratic primaries – behind former vice president Walter Mondale and runner-up Gary Hart – making him the most successful Black presidential candidate until Obama.

Mondale was trounced by Ronald Reagan in that year’s general election.

Four years later, Jackson was back on the convention stage after coming in second to nominee Michael Dukakis, urging Americans to find “common ground”.

“That’s the challenge of our party tonight. Left wing, right wing … It takes two wings to fly,” he said, in a cadence reminiscent of King’s.

Jackson attacked what he called the “reverse Robin Hood” of a Reagan presidency that bestowed riches on the wealthy while leaving poor Americans struggling.

“It gets dark sometimes, but the morning comes. Don’t you surrender,” he said as the crowd roared. 

While his electric speech raised Jackson’s profile, the nation’s gradual tilt to the right deprived him of major political influence in later years.

And though his accomplishments were pioneering, his work was also tarnished by controversy.

In 1984, he described New York as “Hymietown”, using a pejorative term for Jews.

One of Jackson’s sons, former US congressman Jesse Jackson Jr, served prison time after pleading guilty in 2013 to taking some $750,000 in campaign money for his personal use.

Jackson’s personal story began with hardship.

He was born Jesse Louis Burns on October 8, 1941, in Greenville, South Carolina, to an unwed teen mother and a former professional boxer.

He later adopted the last name of his stepfather Charles Jackson.

“I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth. I had a shovel programmed for my hands,” he once said.

He excelled in his segregated high school and earned a football scholarship to the University of Illinois, but later transferred to the predominantly Black Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina, where he received a degree in sociology.

In 1960, he participated in his first sit-in, in Greenville, and then joined the Selma-to-Montgomery civil rights marches in 1965, where he caught King’s attention.

Jackson later emerged as a mediator and envoy on several notable international fronts.

He became a prominent advocate for ending apartheid in South Africa, and in the 1990s served as presidential special envoy for Africa for Bill Clinton.

Missions to free US prisoners took him to Syria, Iraq and Serbia.

But he ruffled some feathers in 2005 when he met in Venezuela with Hugo Chavez, and then spoke at the strongman’s funeral in 2013.

Jackson announced in 2017 that he was battling Parkinson’s disease, and he began curtailing his public engagements.

But he stood with George Floyd’s family at their April 2021 press conference when a Minneapolis jury convicted Floyd’s killer.

The verdict brought “relief, but not a time for celebration”, Jackson told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

“It’s a long struggle for racial equality in this country.”

source -France 24

Civil Rights Icon Reverend Jesse Jackson dies at 84

The legendary civil rights icon, Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr., passed away peacefully on the morning of Tuesday, February 17, 2026, at the age of 84. His family confirmed his death in a statement, describing him as a “servant leader” who dedicated his life to the oppressed and the voiceless. 

Jackson died at his home, surrounded by his loved ones.While a specific cause of death was not immediately released, he had been battling progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP)—a rare neurodegenerative condition—for over a decade. He had also been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2017.

He was most recently hospitalised in November 2025 for observation related to his neurological condition. 

Rev. Jackson was one of the most influential figures in American history, serving as a bridge between the era of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the modern political landscape. 

He marched alongside Dr. King in the 1960s and was present at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis when King was assassinated in 1968.

He made history with two groundbreaking bids for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1984 and 1988, building a “Rainbow Coalition” that mobilised millions of new voters.

Beyond the US, he was a renowned international negotiator, famously securing the release of US soldiers and political prisoners in regions like Syria, Cuba, and Yugoslavia. 

The Rainbow PUSH Coalition, which Jackson founded, stated that his “unwavering belief in justice, equality, and love uplifted millions”.

Public observances and a celebration of life service are being planned in Chicago, with details to be released shortly. 
He is survived by his wife, Jacqueline, and their children.

By Anthony Solly

IEBC Gazettes 23 Candidates For February 26 By-Elections

The stage is set for a high-stakes political showdown this February 26, as the IEBC officially clears 23 warriors to battle for four vacant thrones.

In the dusty expanses of Isiolo South, a heavy silence lingers after the passing of MP Mohamed Tubi Bidu, but the race to succeed him has just ignited.

Three contenders have stepped into the arena, with Tubi Mohamed (UDA) and Bina Mohamed (Jubilee) leading a fierce charge to claim the National Assembly seat.

Meanwhile, as the battle for the grassroots intensifies in the wards, Evurore Ward has become a crowded battlefield with 10 candidates jostling for the attention of over 26,000 voters.

In Muminji and West Kabras, the air is thick with the scent of campaign trails as 13 more hopefuls seek to fill the void left by ambitious predecessors.

The clock is ticking toward the February 23 deadline, the final hour when the megaphones must go silent and the posters stop fluttering.

Armed with the Candidates Registration Management System, the IEBC watches from the sidelines, ensuring every ballot is a true reflection of the people’s will.

By Anthony Solly

IEBC Responds to Rigging Allegations Linked to Voter Data Sharing Deal

The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) has rejected claims of voter register manipulation, reaffirming that its operations are conducted in full compliance with legal and constitutional requirements.

In a statement issued on 16 February 2026, the IEBC responded to accusations from Democratic Party leader Justin Muturi, who alleged that the Commission, in collaboration with state agencies, could misuse national identity data to influence the 2027 General Election.

Muturi specifically raised concerns about the potential manipulation of voter records, particularly regarding young Kenyans’ identity details.

The IEBC firmly denied these allegations, emphasising that all procedures for handling voter data are lawful, secure, and designed to maintain the integrity of the electoral process.

The Commission stated that its mandate, under Article 88(4) of the Constitution and the Elections Act, 2011, requires it to keep an accurate and up-to-date voter register.

To achieve this, the IEBC works closely with government bodies, including the National Registration Bureau, Civil Registration Services, and the Directorate of Immigration Services, to verify identity details, confirm passport information for Kenyans abroad, and remove deceased persons from the register.

While collaborating with these agencies, the IEBC assured the public that the voter register remains under its exclusive custody and control.

It further reiterated that data-sharing is conducted within the confines of the law, including adherence to the Data Protection Act, 2019, to prevent any form of fraud and ensure compliance with legal standards.

The Commission also called on political leaders to refrain from making unsubstantiated claims that could undermine public trust in the electoral system.

The IEBC warned that such rhetoric could damage confidence in both the Commission and the democratic process.

“You will not hide!” – Gachagua tells IG Kanja, threatening a 100,000 people march on Friday

Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua has attacked the Inspector General of Police, Douglas Kanja, for failing to arrest police officers who ambushed him at ACK Witima Church on Sunday, January 25, 2026.

Gachagua, who had gone to Kanja’s office to follow up with the police on the issue, alleged that the Inspector General went into hiding to avoid meeting with him and his fellow United Opposition leaders.

⁠“Tumefika pale akatorokea mlango ya nyuma. Anaogopa kukutana na sisi,” said Gachagua on Monday. (We got there and he left through the back door, afraid of meeting with us.)

The opposition team then held an impromptu political rally in Nyamakima, downtown Nairobi, where he told the police chief that he would be back on Friday, February 20, for another meeting.

However, Mr Gachagua, the leader of the Democracy for the Citizens Party (DCP), promised to marshal 100,000 Kenyans on Friday to march to IG Kanja’s office, saying he would bring the nation’s capital to a standstill.

“Tumemwambia siku ya ijumaa, saa tatu, tutakuja kwako na watu elfu mia moja kutoka jijini Nairobi,” said Gachagua.

Mr Gachagua is seeking justice over a January 25, 2026, incident at the ACK Witima Church, where police lobbed tear gas canisters into the church compound and inside the building during the service, which he was in attendance.

He labelled the attack as an assassination attempt on his life, sanctioned by President William Ruto and demanded that IG Kanja arrest the officers involved in the attack.

“This was an assassination attack targeted towards Rigathi Gachagua… a special squad of police officers called Nairobi Sierra of 12 officers, was dispatched to eliminate us in church,” Mr Gachagua said after the incident, giving the IG until February 15 to meet his demands.

On February 16, as promised, Rigathi and the United Opposition team marched to Harambee House to meet with the IG, who was nowhere to be found.

“Despite scheduling an appointment with leaders of the United Opposition to review and track progress on critical issues such as police brutality, church attacks, and violence against women and children, he chose instead the convenience of a hide-and-seek game, subjecting us to interactions with junior police officers,” an angry Gachagua said.

“His continued refusal to act on the violent attack at ACK Witima Church, coupled with the escalating attacks across our nation, confirms a deliberate strategy to shield perpetrators and normalise impunity.”

South African trio charged with Bolt driver’s murder filmed on dashcam

Three South Africans have been charged with murder following the killing of an e-hailing taxi driver, the manner of whose death, captured on dashcam footage, has shocked many people.

A video shared widely on social media shows a man and a woman tussling with the driver, Isaac Satlat, who they appeared to be robbing. Satlat tries to fight back before one of the passengers appears to strangle him until he goes limp.

The trio, who were arrested over the weekend, were in court in Pretoria on Monday and have since abandoned their bail applications. They were not asked to comment on the charges.

A fourth suspect later handed himself over to police on Monday.

He will appear in court on Tuesday, police said in a brief update after Dikeledi Mphela, 24, Goitsione Machidi, 25 and McClaren Mushwana, 30 made a brief appearance. All four also face robbery charges.

Satlat, 22, was a Nigerian national but, in a country that has often been blighted by xenophobic violence, his family said the attack was not linked to his nationality.

According to prosecutors, the accused ordered a ride on e-hailing platform Bolt last Wednesday using a number not registered in any of their names.

When the car arrived, Mphela and the fourth suspect allegedly got into the car while Machidi and Mushwana followed them in a separate car, authorities added.

They then “forced the deceased to stop the vehicle, strangled him to death and robbed him of his cell phone and vehicle which was later recovered”, the prosecuting authority’s spokesperson Lumka Mahanjana said.

There has been a growing number of reports of e-hailing drivers coming under attack in South Africa, with many drivers calling for greater protection, as the country grapples with high crime levels and one of the highest murder rates in the world.

The e-hailing partners’ council condemned Satlat’s killing, adding that it was not an “isolated incident”.

The organisation praised the role that the dashcam footage and social media played in capturing his murder but reiterated calls for “preventative security measures” to better protect drivers.

It also called on e-hailing companies to “vet and verify passengers to prevent criminals masquerading as customers”.

Numerous political parties and e-hailing drivers gathered outside the court house on Monday to protest against Satlat’s murder.

One driver called for the government to set up a task team to deal with the attacks on them, according to local broadcaster Newzroom Afrika.

He also called for the establishment of a system to compensate the families of drivers killed on the job. Spokesperson for the Satlat family Solomon Izang Ashoms said his relatives were left with unanswered questions.

“His dad is struggling, we’re very afraid for [him] because his blood pressure’s been shooting up [since the death],” Ashoms said.

The case against the three was postponed to next Monday.

Fake funeral suspects allegedly used hearse to smuggle charcoal in Malawi

Police in Malawi are searching for nine suspects who escaped from custody after being caught allegedly smuggling charcoal in a hearse disguised as part of a funeral procession.

Acting on a tip-off, forestry officials intercepted the vehicle at a roadblock near the main city of Blantyre. Inside, they found an empty coffin placed over several bags of charcoal, with an estimated value of $1,700 (£1,200), the Reuters news agency reported.

But a manager from the funeral service told the BBC that the hearse driver was returning from seeing a bereaved family when he bought the bags of fuel that were later confiscated.

The smuggling of charcoal, in high demand for cooking, is widespread in Malawi.

William Mitembe, a forestry official, told local media that the weekend’s operation was the “most complex illegal charcoal trafficking case in the country’s history”.

About 30 bags of charcoal concealed underneath an empty coffin were seized during a routine roadblock in Chikwawa district, about 40 km (25 miles) south of Blantyre, another forestry official, Hector Nkawihe, told Reuters.

But in an interview with the BBC, the company manager of the affected funeral service had a different version of events.

Patrick Dimba said that a hearse driver had been sent to a family with two coffins in order for them to select one.

It was on his way back with the remaining empty coffin that the driver bought 11 bags of charcoal.

According to Dimba, there were no other passengers in the hearse when it was stopped at the checkpoint.

However, a police spokesman told Reuters that nine suspects remain at large and have not yet been charged.

Nkawihe said the suspects were briefly detained, but later escaped custody leaving behind the impounded hearse.

“They face two charges of illegal possession of forestry products and transportation of the same,” he added.

If guilty, the suspects could face up to five years in prison or a fine.

The illegal charcoal trade is rampant in Malawi and a major driver of deforestation. Most Malawians rely on it for cooking due to frequent electricity blackouts.

Last month, Malawi’s energy regulator hiked petrol and diesel prices by more than 40%, marking the second time fuel costs gone up in four months.

President Peter Mutharika, who returned to power last year, has been trying to revive Malawi’s ailing economy.

Woman Arrested in Kisumu as Police Seize 395 Litres of Illicit Chang’aa

Police officers have intensified the fight against illicit alcohol in Kisumu County, staging a dramatic raid in Nyalenda B that ended with the arrest of a woman suspected of running a large-scale chang’aa business.

The security operation unfolded in the morning of February 16, 2026, when a multi-agency team led by the Kisumu County Police Commander, alongside senior officers from CCIO, DCIO, SCPC Kisumu Central, STAPOL Migosi, and STAPOL Nyalenda, descended on the Maembe Tatu area. 

Their target was the home of Linet Achieng Odhiambo, better known in the community as “Min Sharon”, a 42 year old businesswoman.

What began as a straightforward raid quickly turned into a tense standoff. Upon realizing the police presence, Odhiambo locked herself inside her house and refused to open the door. 

For nearly thirteen hours, officers maintained their position outside, waiting for her to comply. It was only at 7:30 in the evening that she finally surrendered, allowing police to enter and search the premises.

Inside, officers uncovered a staggering cache of illicit brew. Hidden in the kitchen, the store, the ceiling, and even beneath sofa cushions were 143 sachets of chang’aa, each containing about two liters, along with a plastic container holding 2.75 liters. 

In total, 395 liters of chang’aa were seized. Scenes of Crime personnel documented the evidence, underscoring the scale of the illegal trade.

Odhiambo was arrested and placed in custody at Nyalenda Police Station. She is expected to appear in court to face charges of possession of illicit brew, a crime that continues to undermine public health and safety in Kisumu.

For residents of Nyalenda, the raid was more than just a police operation, it was a moment of relief. Chang’aa, notorious for its potency and devastating effects, has long been linked to addiction, family breakdowns, and even fatalities. 

Community members expressed gratitude that authorities are taking firm action against those profiting from the misery of others.

Police have emphasized that this raid is part of a broader campaign to dismantle networks of illicit brew dealers across Kisumu County. 

Their commitment reflects growing concern over the social and economic toll of psychotropic substances, which often target vulnerable populations.

As Odhiambo awaits her day in court, the community watches closely, hoping that justice will not only punish offenders but also deter others from engaging in the illicit trade. 

For Kisumu, this crackdown is more than a single arrest, it is a step toward reclaiming the health, dignity, and future of its people.

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