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Plane collides with helicopter midair near Washington, DC
A regional jet carrying dozens of passengers and a military helicopter have collided midair near Washington Dc the United States, raising fears of mass casualties and forcing a halt to all takeoffs and landings at Ronald Reagan Washington national airport.
US President Donald Trump said late on Wednesday he had been briefed on the “terrible accident”.
“May God bless their souls. Thank you for the incredible work being done by our first responders,” he said in a statement. “I am monitoring the situation and will provide more details as they arise.”
The PSA Airlines Bombardier CRJ700 jet collided with a Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter at around 9pm local time while en route from Wichita, Kansas, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said.
“PSA was operating as Flight 5342 for American Airlines. It departed from Wichita, Kansas,” the FAA said in a statement.
“The FAA and NTSB will investigate. The NTSB will lead the investigation,” the aviation agency added, referring to the National Transportation Safety Board.
[Aljazeera]
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Sri Lanka crumble after Khawaja and Inglis set up mammoth Australia total
Usman Khawaja’s maiden Test double century and a rapid ton from debutant Josh Inglis decimated a flagging Sri Lanka before Australia’s attack breathed life into a slow Galle surface late on day two.
After stand-in captain Steven Smith declared Australia’s innings on 654 for 6 midway through the final session, Sri Lanka’s top order fell apart and they lost three wickets inside the opening 10 overs. Sri Lanka reached 44 for 3 when rain ended the day’s play prematurely with Australia enjoying a firm grip on the first Test.
Exhausted after spending 154 overs in the field, openers Oshada Fernando and Dimuth Karunaratne were dismissed within the first five overs.
With Mitchell Starc selected as Australia’s only frontline quick, there was intrigue over who would share the new ball with him. Left-arm spinner Matthew Kuhnemann, playing in his first Test match in almost two years, was an inspired choice and claimed Fernando lbw for 7 in his first over.
Bowling from around the wicket, Kuhnemann trapped him on the flap of his front pad as Fernando reviewed in vain. Kuhnemann was mightily pleased when the decision was upheld having made a speedy recovery from a thumb injury sustained in a BBL match on January 16.
Sri Lanka slid further when Karunaratne edged a short-of-a-length delivery from Starc to gully, where substitute fielder Nathan McSweeney completed a catch on the juggle having desperately turned around and dived after the ball bobbled over his head.
Having had little to do in the recent series against India, offspinner Nathan Lyon completed Australia’s near perfect day with the wicket of Angelo Mathews, who was brilliantly caught by a diving Travis Head at short leg.
Australia have completely capitalised on winning a favourable toss and batting first on a slow surface amid stifling humidity as they amassed their highest ever total against Sri Lanka.
Khawaja finished with 232 off 352 balls and fell early in the second session dominated by Inglis, who became the first Australian debutant to score a Test century since Adam Voges – his Western Australia coach – in 2015.
England-born Inglis reached his century off just 90 balls and he jumped high before punching the air with his proud parents visibly emotional in the terraces. He joined Michael Clarke and Shaun Marsh as Australian century-makers on Test debut in Asia.
Inglis showcased his proficiency against spin with decisive footwork either by skipping down the track or rocking back deep into the crease. His aggressiveness and maturity, having captained Australia in ODI and T20I cricket recently, reinforced why the selectors were keen to shoehorn him in the side.
Inglis, the Western Australia wicketkeeper playing as a specialist batter, celebrated his milestone with incumbent keeper Alex Carey at the crease before he fell on 102 having faced 94 balls.
Khawaja had earlier notched his highest Test score, overtaking his 195 not out against South Africa at the SCG in 2023 when rain forced an Australia declaration.
Khawaja and Smith were the fulcrum of Australia’s massive first innings, combining for a 266-run partnership. Smith was the only wicket to fall in the morning session after being trapped lbw for 141 by legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay, Sri Lanka’s most threatening bowler.
Smith added 37 runs to his overnight tally after a momentous opening day where he became the fourth Australian to reach 10,000 Test runs en route to a 35th century.
The 38-year-old Khawaja celebrated his first Test double century just before lunch as he kneeled down and bowed to the turf as the fans, many of whom are Australians, applauded with gusto.
He had earlier overtaken Justin Langer’s 166 in Colombo in 2004 as the highest score by an Australian in Sri Lanka. Having struggled against spin earlier in his career in South Asia, Khawaja has become only the second Australian after Allan Border to make Test centuries in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
Khawaja has wound back the clock after an 18-month Test-century drought, having most recently against India struggled at the hands of tormentor Jasprit Bumrah.
Sri Lanka utilised just their four frontline bowlers with sole quick Asith Fernando bowling just 15 overs. Left-arm spinner Prabath Jayasuriya was effectively blunted with 3 for 193 off 60 overs in a far cry from when he claimed 12 wickets against Australia on the same ground in 2022.
Sri Lanka’s attack were unable to counter Australia’s aggressive approach and stem the flow of runs. Their tardy performance in the field on the opening day, where they missed several opportunities to dismiss Khawaja and Smith, proved costly.
Australia resumed on 330 for 2 with play starting 15 minutes early after rain ended day one prematurely. After resorting to a defensive leg-stump tactic late on day one, Jayasuriya attacked the stumps and aimed to skid the second new ball on.
But after four overs, Smith had enough and showed his first signs of aggression by skipping down the wicket as the partnership passed 200 runs.
Khawaja unfurled the reverse sweep to good effect on day one, but was lucky on his first attempt in the morning’s play when he only just cleared Peiris over short third for a boundary.
A third straight wicketless session loomed for Sri Lanka until Vandersay deceived Smith with a delivery that straightened down the line and hit him on the back pad. Vandersay’s enthusiastic appeal was initially turned down, but the decision was overturned on review in a massive relief for Sri Lanka.
After waiting almost 100 overs, Inglis finally entered the crease as he chewed gum furiously awaiting his first delivery in Test cricket. He started in fine fashion with a boundary after whipping Vandersay through mid-on and was at ease against spin.
He showcased his confidence by skipping down the track and launching several blows down the ground to race to 44 at a run a ball pace by tea.
Fernando was handed the ball after the interval for the first time in the day’s play and tried to provide a spark for his flagging team. But his short delivery was treated with disdain by Inglis, brought up on the WACA’s fast and bouncy surface.
Inglis reached his half-century off 51 balls to become the third Australian debutant in as many Tests to reach that landmark, following in the footsteps of Beau Webster and Sam Konstas.
Shortly after the pair reached their 100-run partnership, Inglis was given out lbw on 58 off Nishan Peiris after being struck on the back leg having missed a reverse sweep. But he reviewed immediately and the decision was overturned with a nick on the bottom of the bat detected.
Inglis remained unflustered and continued attacking, but Khawaja’s indefatigable knock finally ended when Jayasuriya enticed an edge to wicketkeeper Kusal Mendis.
Inglis reached his ton with a push through the off-side before providing a simple catch to cover as Jayasuriya’s toil was again rewarded.
Australia ground Sri Lanka into the ground before Smith finally declared and batting suddenly became extremely difficult for the beleaguered home team.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka 44 for 3 (Kamindu Mendis 13*, Dinesh Chandimal 9*; Mitchell Starc 1-10, Mathew Khuneman 1-26, Nathan Lyon 1-7) trail Australia 654 for 6 dec in 154 overs (Usman Khawaja 232, Steven Smith 141, Josh Inglis 102, Travis Head 57; Jeffrey Vandersay 3-182, Prabath Jayasuriya 3-193) by 610 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Israel says eight captives, including five foreigners, released in Gaza
The Israeli army says eight captives, including three Israelis and five foreign nationals, held in Gaza have been released in the third phase of a ceasefire and captive exchange deal between Israel and Hamas.
Agam Berger, a 20-year-old Israeli soldier, was the first to be released on Thursday as she emerged from under rubble at the Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza, which has repeatedly been targeted by Israeli forces since October 2023.
Later on Thursday, an Israeli female civilian, Arbel Yehoud, was released outside of what used to be the house of former Hamas political chief Yahya Sinwar in the southern city of Khan Younis.
In chaotic scenes witnessed on the ground as the crowd of Palestinians swelled, another Israeli civilian and five Thai nationals were also handed over to Red Cross officials, the Israeli army said in a tweet.
In return, Israel is due to release 110 Palestinians held in Israeli prisons.
Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum, reporting from Khan Younis, said people were gathering at the location in Khan Younis for the release of the captives.
“Thousands of civilians – children, women, elderly people – are here to witness the scene,” he said. “Dozens of fighters [from both Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad] are lined up in the area, as they prepared for the arrival of the Israeli captives along with the Red Cross. They are trying to control the situation on the ground and organise the exchange. Hamas fighters are on the rooftop of the house. Other onlookers are on the rooftops of nearby buildings.”
Last Saturday, Hamas released four female Israeli soldiers held in Gaza and 200 Palestinians were released from Israeli jails as part of the agreement that halted more than 15 months of war.
[Aljazeera]
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King dictates proceedings once again as Australia Women take control
Not for the first time in this series, Alana King put on a masterclass of legspin bowling in front of the Shane Warne Stand to bamboozle England and hand Australia full control on the opening day of the pink-ball Test at the MCG.
Just as she did across town at the Junction Oval during the ODI series, where a smaller, quainter Shane Warne Stand casts a shadow at the southern end, King put on a clinic bowling 23 overs unchanged from the start of the second session to claim career-best Test figures of 4 for 45 and help bowl England out for 170. Nat Sciver Brunt’s 51 was the lone shining light for England on another bleak afternoon, but she should have been out twice to King whose spell even outshone the bizarre pop-up rock concert Australian artist G-Flip performed during the dinner break.
The bowling performance was soured however by a hip injury to Ellyse Perry. She landed heavily after diving to knock back a ball on the rope during the middle session. She left the field shortly after and did not return for the last two hours of Australia’s bowling innings. Australia’s team management confirmed she would not bat on the first evening and would be reassessed in the morning.
Annabel Sutherland instead walked in at No. 3 and saw Australia through to stumps alongside Phoebe Litchfield, cruising to 56 for 1 after the loss of Georgia Voll who opened on Test debut.
Australia would have been delighted with the bowling performance after winning the toss and electing to field on an MCG surface featuring 9mm of grass. But they could have bowled England out even sooner.
King should have had more, with four chances missed off her bowling alone as Australia were uncharacteristically sloppy in the field. Beth Mooney missed a stumping and a caught behind off King and dropped another off Annabel Sutherland diving to her right. Alyssa Healy failed to take a simple catch cleanly at slip, again off King, clutching at the ball awkwardly and grounding it while it was in the end of her fingers. King dropped a caught-and-bowled chance, while Voll grassed a straightforward chance at slip off Darcie Brown.
None of the misses were costly though as England capitulated again. King’s hard-spun legbreaks were the stuff of dreams for a legspinner but will only create further nightmares for England’s batters after haunting them all tour.
England were getting a foothold in the day at 97 for 3 when King deceived Sophia Dunkley with late drop to force a simple chipped return catch after Mooney had early missed a difficult stumping chance.
King then went to work on Danni Wyatt-Hodge, fizzing three huge legbreaks past her outside edge in one over. Sciver-Brunt, who had held England’s innings together, was also beaten multiple times in similar fashion.
King finally kissed Sciver-Brunt’s outside edge with another perfect legbreak only for a poorly set-up Healy at slip to grass the rare catch without gloves on. Her injured foot meant she was not keeping and posting up at slip to limit her running. But she was set up too high, with her hands on her knees, and was unable to pouch the ankle-high chance cleanly.
Litchfield had no such problems at silly mid-off, taking at outstanding catch diving low to her right after Wyatt-Hodge presented the leading edge to another fizzing legbreak.
England may have regretted leaving out Charlie Dean and selecting three seamers as their lone spinner Sophie Ecclestone chipped King to cover to hand her a third scalp.
Sciver-Brunt was then bowled for the fifth consecutive innings in the series, and for the third time against legspin, trying to a pull a good-length legbreak that hit the stumps well under bail height.
Amongst King’s carnage, Amy Jones was bowled playing back to spin for the second time in the series, missing a full delivery from Ash Gardner and losing her off stump.
King missed out on a maiden Test five-for as Mooney dropped an edge off Ryana MacDonald-Gay and then clanged a sharp return catch offered by Lauren Filer. Brown claimed Filer instead before Lauren Bell was run out tamely to end the innings.
Brown and Kim Garth had earlier laid the groundwork for King’s wizardry with an excellent opening burst that saw England slump to 47 for 3. Maia Bouchier’s miserable tour continued, nicking Garth behind for 2 to go with scores of 13, 0, 0, 17 and 9 in the white-ball series.
Tammy Beaumont was trapped plumb lbw for 8 by an excellent delivery from Brown that nipped back off the seam to leave England 23 for 2.
Skipper Heather Knight’s innings was anything but assured. She survived a similar lbw shout off Brown and a subsequent review that showed it was umpire’s call on clipping leg stump. She edged Sutherland behind but Mooney could not take the one-handed offer. Garth then followed Brown and nipped another back into Knight’s front pad and the appeal was rewarded with a raised finger.
Brief scores:
Australia Women 56 for 1 in 22 overs ( Annabel Sutherland 24*, Phoebe Litchfield 20*; Lauren Bell 1-21) trail England Women 170 in 71.4 overs (Heathe Knight 25, Nat Sciver-Brunt 51, Sophia Dunkley 21, Danni Wyatt Hodge 22; Kim Garth 2-13, Darcie Brown 2-47, Ashleigh Gardner 1-30, Alana King 4-45) by 114 runs
[Cricinfo]
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