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Shamar Joseph scripts West Indies’ first Test win in Australia in 27 years

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Shamar Joseph finished with figures of 7 for 68 in his team's scintillating series-leveling victory (Cricbuzz)

Shamar Joseph’s stunning 7-68 scripted a thrilling eight-run victory in the pink-ball Test match at the Gabba, ending a 27-year drought for West Indies in Australia. In overcast Brisbane on Day 4, the rookie pacer flipped the game on its head with his second fifer of the series that brought Australia’s 11-match winning streak in day-night Tests to a screeching halt. He triggered a collapse of 4 for 23 before Dinner that the hosts couldn’t recover from despite Steve Smith’s gutsy 91*. With this, West Indies shared the spoils in the two-match series.

This was in sharp contrast to how the hosts and the overnight batters started the day. In gloomy conditions, Smith and Cameron Green were solid in defence as they negotiated testing opening spells and nearly went through the first hour unscathed. Shamar’s last two balls before drinks, however, suddenly changed the complexion of the game.

After picking up speed, and a few boundaries, Green was done in by an absolute jaffa when Shamar got one to breach Green’s defences, hit his elbow and crash the stumps, denying the batter a hard-fought fifty. The pacer then handed Travis Head a king pair, bowled by a terrific yorker.

Smith got his fifty right after, and Mitchell Marsh started aggressively just like in the first innings but Shamar nipped that threat in the bud. In his next over, the pacer knocked back Alex Carey’s off-stump as Australia slipped from 113/2 to 136/6 in the space of six overs.

Mitchell Starc briefly counterattacked, hitting four beautiful boundaries in his stroke-filled knock of 21 off 14. However, Shamar had the last laugh when Starc miscued his pull to covers to leave Australia seven down on 171. Pat Cummins lasted all of eight balls before Shamar got a length ball to rear up on the Australian skipper and take a thick outside edge through to the keeper.

Having lost their captain at the stroke of Dinner, Smith nearly walked off for the break before returning to the middle as the session was extended. Australia needed 45 more to win and Windies were just two scalps away.

In bright and sunny conditions on the other side of Dinner, the sun set quickly on Australia’s stunning pink-ball record. After shelling a low return catch off Nathan Lyon, Alzarri Joseph had him edging behind the very next delivery as Australia needed 25 more with the last pair in the middle. All eyes were on Smith, batting on 76, and he did lift their hopes with a four and a six in succeeding over off the Josephs. Fittingly though, it was Shamar who knocked back Josh Hazlewood’s off-stump and set off on a wild, celebratory lap as West Indies registered their first win at the Gabba since 1968.

Brief scores:
West Indies 311 (Joshua Da Silva 79, Kavem Hodge 71, Kevin Sinclair 50; Mitchell Starc 4-82) & 193 (Kirk McKenzie 41; Josh Hazlewood 3-23, Nathan Lyon 3-42) beat Australia 289/9 decl (Usman Khawaja 75, Alex Care 65, Pat Cummins 64*; Alzarri Joseph 4-84, Kemar Roach 3-47) & 207 (Steve Smith 91; Shamar Joseph 7-68) by 8 runs



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India reports strikes on military bases, Pakistan denies any role

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Pakistani security officials inspect the site of an alleged Indian drone strike in Karachi [BBC]

India has accused Pakistan of attacking three of its military bases with drones and missiles, a claim which has been denied by Islamabad.

The Indian Army said it had foiled Pakistan’s attempts to attack its bases in Jammu and Udhampur, in Indian-administered Kashmir, and Pathankot, in India’s Punjab state.

Blasts were reported on Thursday evening in Jammu city in Indian-administered Kashmir as the region went into a blackout.

Pakistan’s defence minister told the BBC they were not behind the attack.

“We deny it, we have not mounted anything so far,” Khawaja Asif told the BBC, adding: “We will not strike and then deny”.

EPA A police truck in a darkened area of Srinigar during a city-wide blackout in the wider Jammu region.
Blasts were reported in the city of Jammu which went into a black-out [BBC]

Earlier on Thursday, India said it had struck Pakistan’s air defences and “neutralised” Islamabad’s attempts to hit military targets in India on Wednesday night.

Pakistan called that action another “act of aggression”, following Indian missile strikes on Wednesday on targets in Pakistan and Pakistani-administered Kashmir.

India’s strikes on Wednesday sparked a chorus of calls for de-escalation from the international community with the UN and world leaders calling for calm.

The attacks and incidents of shelling along the border have fanned fears of wider conflict erupting between the nuclear-armed states.

It is being viewed as the worst confrontation between the two countries in more than two decades.

India said it hit nine “terrorist infrastructure” sites on Wednesday in retaliation for a militant attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir last month.

Pakistan has strongly denied Indian claims that it backed the militants who killed 26 civilians in the mountainous town of Pahalgam.

It was the bloodiest attack on civilians in the region for years, sending tensions soaring. Most of the victims were Indian tourists.

Indian-administered Kashmir has seen a decades-long insurgency against Indian rule which has claimed thousands of lives.

Kashmir has been a flashpoint between the countries since they became independent after British India was partitioned in 1947. Both claim Kashmir and have fought two wars over it.

Reuters Evacuees from border areas who have had to flee due to the shelling arriving at a shelter in Jammu on 8/5/2025
Locals in border areas have had to be evacuated due to the cross-border shelling – here women and children arrive at a shelter near Jammu [BBC]

There were calls for restraint from around the world after India launched ‘Operation Sindoor’ early on Wednesday.

But on Thursday both sides accused each other of further military action.

Pakistan’s military spokesman said drones sent by India had been engaged in multiple locations.

“Last night, India showed another act of aggression by sending drones to multiple locations,” Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said. “These locations are Lahore, Gujranwala, Chakwal, Rawalpindi, Attock, Bahawalpur, Miano, Chor and near Karachi.”

He said one civilian had been killed in Sindh province and four troops injured in Lahore.

The US consulate in Lahore told its staff to shelter in the building.

India said its latest action had been taken in response to Pakistan’s attempts to “engage a number of military targets in northern and western India” overnight.

“It has been reliably learnt that an Air Defence system at Lahore has been neutralised,” a Defence Ministry statement said. Pakistan denied the claim.

There was no independent confirmation of the two countries’ versions of events.

Later in the day India’s foreign secretary Vikram Misri told a news conference in Delhi: “Our intention has not been to escalate matters, we are only responding to the original escalation.”

[BBC]

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IPL 2025: Punjab Kings -Delhi Capitals match in Dharamsala abandoned after floodlight failure

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The PBKS-DC game in Dharamsala was called off after only 10.1 overs [Cricinfo]

The Punjab Kings (PBKS) vs Delhi Capitals (DC) match in IPL 2025 in Dharamsala has been called off after 10.1 overs.

“The Punjab Kings v Delhi Capitals match (Match#58) in Tata IPL was forced to be abandoned due to a significant technical failure at the HPCA stadium in Dharamsala,” an official statement from the IPL said. “Due to a power outage in the area, one of the light towers at the HPCA stadium malfunctioned. BCCI regrets the inconvenience caused to the in-stadium attendees.”

In the 10.1 overs possible, PBKS openers Priyanash Arya (70) and Prabhsimran Singh (50*) dominated proceedings, stitching up a 122-run opening stand off 61 balls.

Arya fell in the first ball of the 11th over, top-edging a T Natarajan slower-ball bouncer onto his helmet, which popped up for a simple catch. The players then left the field due to a floodlight failure at the stadium. Around 9.40pm IST, the match was called off.

Before the abandonment, Arya and Prabhsimran took down Mitchell Starc and Dushmantha Chameera in the powerplay as PBKS raced away to 50 for no loss in four overs.

After the powerplay, the pair took down Kuldeep Yadav as well, smashing him for two sixes and two fours. Arya reached his third fifty-plus score of the season in the seventh over off just 25 balls. Prabhsimran reached his own fifty in the tenth and in the process became the first uncapped batter to hit four half-centuries in a row in the IPL.

PBKS next play Mumbai Indians (MI) on May 11, a game that was shifted from Dharmasal to Ahmedabad. DC will play Gujarat Titans (GT) in Delhi on the same day.

[Cricinfo]

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Cardinal Robert Prevost elected as Pope Leo XIV, first US pontiff

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Newly elected Pope Leo XIV appears at the balcony of St Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 [Aljazeera]

United States Cardinal Robert Prevost has been elected the first US pontiff in the 2,000-year history of the Catholic Church and has taken the name Pope Leo XIV.

Pope Leo made his first public appearance to impart a blessing from the roofed area of St Peter’s Basilica. In his first public words, Pope Leo told the faithful “peace be with all of you”. He emphasised the theme of peace throughout the address.

“Evil will not prevail; we are in the hands of God,” he told the crowd and a global audience. “So without fear, united hand in hand with God and among ourselves, we go forward.”

“Thank you, Pope Francis,” he added.

The new church leader called for a “missionary church…that builds bridges, is always open to welcome everyone”.

“He is clearly setting the tone for his papacy,” Al Jazeera Hoda Abdel-Hamid reported from Vatican City.

“He also had a political tone there, calling for peace everywhere, calling for disarmament, calling for building bridges. So we do get an idea in which direction he will be heading,” she said.

“The excitement level is like that of a World Cup final,” she noted earlier.

Pope Leo spent his career ministering in Peru and also lead the Vatican’s powerful office of bishops,

Earlier, white smoke emerged out of the Sistine Chapel chimney, signalling that a new pope had been elected.

Bells rang out Thursday evening from the basilica after cardinals elected the 267th pope to lead the church on the second day of their conclave.

The smoke signal meant the winner secured at least 89 of the votes from the 133 cardinals participating in the conclave to elect a successor to Pope Francis.

A top cardinal uttered the words “Habemus papam!” – Latin for “We have a pope!” – from the loggia or roofed area of the basilica and then read the winner’s birth name in Latin and revealed the name he has chosen to be called.

Priests made the sign of the cross and nuns wept as the crowd shouted “Viva il papa!” (“Long live the pope!”) after the white smoke wafted into the late afternoon sky at 6:07pm (16:07 GMT).

There had been a moment of hesitation in the vast crowd. “Is it white!?” one of the tens of thousands of people in St Peter’s Square asked. “It is!!” another said, shouting with joy.

The crowd erupted in jubilation after waiting for hours to see the colour of the smoke coming out of the Sistine Chapel’s chimney.

Some had bought chairs, books and food for what many believed would have been a long wait.“Habemus papam!” a group of people chanted with emotion.

Significance of the new papal name

The choice of name – Pope Leo XIV – is significant as Pope Leo XIII was the first pope to create the idea of social ethics in the Catholic church, Father James Bretzke, professor of theology at John Carroll University, tells Al Jazeera.

“Leo XIII, who ruled 1878 to 1903, wrote an encyclical which recognised how capitalism worked and the right of labour to organise and work for just living conditions and working conditions, which was really foundational in the church”, he said.

“Up until that time, the church’s hierarchy tended to be identified with the upper class, and so Leo XIII put a redirection on the church, and certainly many of the popes since that time have built on that,” he added.

“I think we can see a deepening of the church’s commitment to workers and the marginalised,” he said.

‘Humble person like Francis’

Reporting from Santiago, Chile, Al Jazeera’s Lucia Newman, delves into Pope Leo’s many years in Latin America.

“He has not just spent time in Peru. He is 69 years old, and he spent most of the last 40 years in the country. He is a binational, so you could say that he has spent more time in Latin America than in the United States, the country of his birth.”

“He was named a cardinal in 2023; before that, he had been named the archbishop of Chiclayo. That is a very poor part of Peru with high unemployment and terrible infrastructure” she continued.

“It really does represent all that’s wrong with many parts of Latin America and Peru, particularly countries with great natural wealth, with lots of minerals, but very bad distribution of wealth.”

“This was something that the former Pope Francis believed very strongly had to be addressed, and so does the new pope. These are things that they agreed on. He was very close to ordinary people. He was known to have breakfast every day with just normal ordinary priests, a humble person like Francis, and someone very in tune with the needs of the poor”, Newman added.

[Aljazeera]

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