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Rew ton trumps Peake’s as England reach U19 World Cup final

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Oliver Peake's effort was comended, even by England players, despite it coming in a losing cause [Cricbuzz]
Only five players had scored hundreds in U19 World Cup semifinals before England captain Thomas Rew and his Australian counterpart Oliver Peake wrote themselves into that exclusive club, also featuring Cheteshwar Pujara, Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal, in a pulsating contest at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo. In the end, Rew’s masterful 110 trumped Peake’s gutsy lone-ranger 100 as England held their nerve to win by 27 runs and book a date with the winners of Wednesday’s India-Afghanistan clash in Friday’s final.
On a sluggish, turning surface that offered inconsistent bounce and turn, Rew’s 107-ball resurrection took England to 277 for 7, a total that proved just beyond Australia’s reach despite Peake’s Herculean effort. The Australian skipper battled cramps, dwindling partners and mounting pressure to keep the chase alive deep into the innings, but eventually ran out of allies with 15 balls still remaining, dismissed for exactly 100 as Australia were bowled out for 250 in the 48th over.
An England victory had seemed far from possible a few hours earlier, when they were reeling at 60 for 3 after opting to bat first. England’s decision was wise – even Peake had admitted at the toss that he would have batted too – but they were set back by a disciplined opening burst from Australia. Will Byrom had Ben Dawkins caught at slip in the second over before Aryan Sharma and Hayden Schiller struck to remove Joseph Moores and Ben Mayes in quick succession. What followed was a captain’s innings of rare composure and calculated aggression.
Rew found his rhythm immediately, hitting his first boundary five balls after Mayes’ dismissal, rocking back to heave Naden Cooray to the wide long-on fence. But it was his decisive fourth-wicket partnership with Caleb Falconer that truly transformed the contest, the pair adding 135 runs to wrest control from Australia and lay the platform for a competitive total. Rew reached his fifty off 46 balls at the halfway mark of the innings, then shifted gears emphatically, plundering six boundaries in the next five overs as he raced toward three figures. He brought up his century with a single to long-on off his 97th delivery.
His dismissal – run out for 110 after a brilliant direct hit from Steven Hogan – was a crucial breakthrough for Australia as the four-time champions gave away just 40 from the final seven overs. But a late contribution from Farhan Ahmed, who remained unbeaten on 28, helped England post a total that would test the defending champions’ mettle.
Chasing 278, Australia lost Will Malajczuk early to Alex French’s cracking yorker in the sixth over before Steven Hogan’s painful 23-ball struggle for just 3 runs stalled any momentum. Nitesh Samuel made a sedate 47 but Ralphie Albert and Manny Lumsden turned the screws further, dismissing Samuel and Alex Lee Young to leave Australia teetering at 116 for 4.
The Australian captain, having walked in at No. 5, launched a counter-attack, combining timing with intelligent placement as he raced to a 55-ball half-century. With Aryan Sharma providing vital support with a 23-ball 34, the pair threatened to pull off an improbable heist, adding 64 runs to keep the required rate manageable. Peake reached his century off 85 balls with Australia needing just 28 from 18 deliveries, but Aryan’s dismissal, caught at deep midwicket to a slower ball from Farhan – proved the decisive blow.
As partners fell around him and severe forearm and palm cramps began to take their toll, Peake soldiered on bravely, but the weight of the chase and his physical limitations (cramps in the right leg) finally caught up with him. And still, in the 46th over, he launched a six and hit four more boundaries off Lumsden to keep Australia alive. However, in the 48th over, with only number eleven Byrom for company and the dream slipping away, Peake lofted one straight to Ben Mayes at point, ending both his magnificent innings and Australia’s hopes of a fifth U19 World Cup crown.
Brief scores:
England 277/7 in 50 overs (Thomas Rew 110, Caleb Falconer 40; Hayden Schiller 2-31) beat Australia 250 in 47.3 overs (Oliver Peake 100; James Minto 2-30, Sebastian Morgan 2-33) by 27 runs.


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Trump confirms talks with Iran as US military shoots down Iranian drone

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People take part in an anti-USA demonstration in support of the Iranian regime in front of the US consulate in Istanbul on February 1, 2026 [File: Aljazeera]

United States President Donald Trump has confirmed that talks with Iran are continuing to try to de-escalate tensions in the Gulf, even as the US military announced shooting down an Iranian drone that approached its aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea.

Trump told reporters at the White House on Tuesday that Washington was negotiating with Iran “right now”, but declined to say where the talks were taking place.

“[The talks] are all over. But they are negotiating. They’d like to do something, and we’ll see if something is going to be done,” he said.

“They had a chance to do something a while ago, and it didn’t work out. And we did ‘Midnight Hammer’, I don’t think they want that happening again,” he added, referring to the operation last June in which the US Air Force and Navy struck three Iranian nuclear facilities.

Trump, who has been  pushing Teheran to agree to talks over its nuclear programme, has repeatedly threatened to attack the country again over a recent crackdown on antigovernment protests. The US president sent the USS Abraham Lincoln to the Gulf last week, leading to fears of a possible military confrontation.

The carrier strike group, which brought roughly 5,700 additional US troops, joined three destroyers and three littoral combat ships that were already in the region.

Tensions have been easing in recent days amid a push by regional powers for a resolution.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said earlier on Tuesday that he had instructed the country’s foreign minister to “pursue fair and equitable negotiations, guided by the principles of dignity, prudence, and expediency”, provided that a “suitable environment exists”.

“These negotiations shall be conducted within the framework of our national interests,” Pezeshkian added

[Aljazeera]

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Seven million cancers a year are preventable, says report

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Air quality around the Delhi region of India reached 'severe' levels in November [BBC]

Seven million people’s cancer could be prevented each year, according to the first global analysis.

A report by World Health Organization (WHO) scientists estimates 37% of cancers are caused by infections, lifestyle choices and environmental pollutants that could be avoided.

This includes cervical cancers caused by human papilloma virus (HPV) infections which vaccination can help prevent, as well as a host of tumours caused by tobacco smoke from cigarettes.

The researchers said their report showed there is a “powerful opportunity” to transform the lives of millions of people.

Some cancers are inevitable – either because of damage we unavoidably build up in our DNA as we age or because we inherit genes that put us at greater risk of the disease.

But researcher Dr Isabelle Soerjomataram said “people are surprised to hear” that nearly four in 10 cancers can be prevented as it is “a substantial number”.

The International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the WHO, analysed 30 preventable factors known to increase the risk of cancer.

These include smoking and ultraviolet (UV) radiation which can directly damage our DNA; obesity and too little physical activity which alter inflammation and hormones in the body to raise cancer risk; and air pollution which can wake up dormant cancer cells.

The agency’s report also looked at nine cancer-causing infections including HPV, hepatitis viruses which lead to liver cancer and the stomach bug H. pylori.

The team used data on cancer cases from 2022 and from the 30 risk factors a decade earlier – across 185 countries – to perform their statistical analysis.

The big three contributors to more than 18 million cancer cases around the world were found to be:

  • smoking tobacco which caused 3.3 million cancers
  • infections causing 2.3 million cancers
  • alcohol use leading to 700,000 cancers
Getty Images Nine people, mostly women, in a line at a bar, smoking cigarettes and holding alcoholic drinks. They all look dressed up for a fun night out.
Smoking and alcohol were two of the main causes of preventable cancers [BBC]

However, the overall figures mask a nuanced picture of cancer risk around the world.

There is a stark sex-divide with 45% of men’s cancers being preventable compared with 30% in women, partly down to higher levels of smoking among men.

In women living in Europe, the top three preventable causes of cancer are smoking, closely followed by infection and then obesity.

While in sub-Saharan Africa, infections dominate and account for nearly 80% of preventable cancers in women.

This means any measures to tackle these cancers would need to be tailored to each region or country.

“This landmark study is a comprehensive assessment of preventable cancer worldwide, incorporating for the first time infectious causes of cancer alongside behavioural, environmental, and occupational risks,” said Soerjomataram, the deputy head of the IARC Cancer Surveillance Unit.

“Addressing these preventable causes represents one of the most powerful opportunities to reduce the global cancer burden.”

The report, published in the journal Nature Medicine, showed lung cancer (linked to smoking and air pollution) stomach cancer (linked to H. pylori infection) and cervical cancer (linked to HPV infection) made up nearly half of all preventable cases of cancer.

Dr Andre Ilbawi, team lead for cancer control at WHO, said the study was “good news” as it showed something could be done and he pointed to the success of countries that have introduced policies to tackle smoking or vaccinate against HPV.

“The percentage of preventable cancers can change over time and our goal is to get it as close to zero as possible,” he said.

[BBC]

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Spain announces plans to ban social media for under-16s

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EPA/Shutterstock Pedro Sanchez, wearing a blue blazer and dark green tie, standing at the lectern at the World Government's summit. It's a bright blue background.EPA/Shutterstock Pedro Sánchez said the changes would protect children from the "digital Wild West"

Spain has become the latest European country to make plans to ban social media for children under the age of 16.

“We will protect them from the digital Wild West,” Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said at the World Governments Summit in Dubai on Tuesday.

The ban, which still needs parliamentary approval, is part of a raft of changes that include making company executives responsible for “illegal or harmful content” on their platforms.

Australia became the world’s first country to bring in a ban last year, with others watching – and judging – its success.

France, Denmark and Austria have also announced that they are considering their own national age limits.

The UK government has launched a consultation on whether to implement a ban for under-16s.

Social media companies have argued that the bans would be ineffective, difficult to implement and could isolate vulnerable teenagers. Reddit is challenging Australia’s ban in the High Court.

“Today, our children are exposed to a space they were never meant to navigate alone,” Sánchez said, describing social media as a place of “addiction, abuse, pornography, manipulation [and] violence. “We will no longer accept that. We will protect them.”

Sánchez first mooted a possible ban in November, but on Tuesday, the plan was fleshed out.

Under the changes, social media platforms would be required to have effective age verification systems, “not just check boxes, but real barriers that work,” the prime minister explained, in a possible reference to the loopholes Australian children use to bypass checks – including simply using a photo of an adult.

The new laws would also criminalise manipulating algorithms to amplify illegal content.

“This is something created, promoted, and disseminated by certain actors whom we will investigate, as well as the platforms whose algorithms amplify disinformation in exchange for profit,” Sánchez said.

“Hiding behind code and claiming that technology is neutral is no longer acceptable.”

There would also be a new system designed to track “how digital platforms fuel division and amplify hate”. No further details were given on how this would work.

Another measure, Sánchez said, would be to “investigate and prosecute the crimes committed by Grok [X’s AI tool], TikTok, and Instagram”.

The European Commission has launched an investigation into Grok over concerns it was used to create sexualised images of real people.

The UK has announced its own investigation into Grok and on Tuesday in France, the offices of X were raided by the Paris prosecutor’s cyber-crime unit as it looked into allegations of offences including unlawful data extraction and complicity in the possession of child pornography.

X is yet to respond to either investigation – the BBC has approached it for comment. It has previously characterised the French investigation as an attack on free speech.

[BBC]

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