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President Wickremesinghe will contest next Presidential poll as a common candidate – Manusha Nanayakkara
Minister of Labour and Foreign Employment Manusha Nanayakkara at a press briefing convened today (17), at the Presidential Media Centre (PMC), under the theme ‘One Way to a Stable Country’ said that incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe will contest the next Presidential Election as a common candidate.
He reiterated that President Wickremesinghe accepted the challenge to guide the nation out of bankruptcy at a time all others declined to take up the challenge. He said that at the moment the President has the support of a majority in parliament and hoped that all who envision a stable economy will gather around him irrespective of political affinity to re-elect him.
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Eyman Fatima powers Pakistan to series victory
Pakistan Women 170/4 in 20 overs (Eyman Fatima 79*, Muneeba Ali 36, Natalie Pervaiz 24; Mitchell Mavunga1-38, Precious Marange 1-33, Lindokuhle Mabhero 1-20) beat Zimbabwe Women 103/8 in 20 overs (Beloved Biza 11, Natasha Mtomba 10, Adel Zimunu 12, Nomvelo Sibanda 18*, Lindokuhle Mabhero 12, Kudzai Chigora 14*; Fatima Sana 1-22, Nashra Sandhu 2-18, Sadia Iqbal 1-10, Tuba Hassan 1-17, Ayesha Zafar 1-10, Natalie Pervaiz 1-09) by 67 runs.
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Britain’s Health Secretary Streeting resigns as pressure on Starmer grows
Britain’s Health Secretary Wes Streeting has resigned from the ruling Labour government, deepening a crisis that threatens to topple Prime Minister Keir Starmer after less than two years in office.
Hours after Streeting’s announcement on Thursday, Labour lawmaker Josh Simons said he would resign from his seat in parliament in a move designed to give Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham a chance to return to parliament and challenge Starmer.
The prime minister is under growing pressure to step down following disastrous results in last week’s local elections.
Streeting posted on X on Thursday that he no longer had “confidence” in Starmer’s leadership, and there was “no doubt” that the party’s unpopularity was a “major and common factor in our defeat across England, Scotland and Wales”.
“It is now clear that you will not lead the Labour Party into the next general election, and that Labour MPs and Labour unions want the debate about what comes next to be a battle of ideas, not of personalities or petty factionalism,” the 43-year-old said.
“It needs to be broad, and it needs the best possible field of candidates. I support that approach and I hope that you will facilitate this.”
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Giant new dinosaur identified from fossils in Thailand
A new type of giant long-necked dinosaur has been identified by scientists from remains dug up in Thailand.
The nagatitan, the largest-ever dinosaur found in South-East Asia, weighed 27 tonnes – as much as nine adult Asian elephants – and measured 27m (88ft) in length, longer than a diplodocus. Like that dinosaur, it belonged to the sauropod family of long-necked herbivores.
A team of researchers from the UK and Thailand identified the species from fossils found beside a pond in north-eastern Thailand a decade ago.
They say the discovery sheds light on how changes in ancient climatic conditions allowed gigantic dinosaurs to develop.
The dinosaur’s full name is Nagatitan chaiyaphumensis, with “naga” referring to a serpent in South-East Asian folklore, “titan” referring to the gods in Greek mythology, and chaiyaphumensis meaning “from Chaiyaphum”, the province where the fossils were discovered.
It lived between 100 and 120 million years ago – around 40 million years earlier than the tyrannosaurus rex – and is about twice the size of that creature.
Thitiwoot Sethapanichsakul, a Thai doctoral student at University College London (UCL), was the lead author of the study which was published in the Scientific Reports journal.
He said the researchers referred to the nagatitan as “the last titan” of Thailand, because the fossils were found in the country’s youngest dinosaur-bearing rock formation.
“Younger rocks laid down towards the end of the time of the dinosaurs are unlikely to contain dinosaur remains because the region by then had become a shallow sea. So this may be the last or most recent large sauropod we will find in South-East Asia,” he said.

Sethapanichsakul, a self-confessed “dinosaur kid”, said in a UCL press release that the study also “fulfils a childhood promise of naming a dinosaur”.
The nagatitan is the 14th dinosaur to be named in Thailand. Palaeontologist Dr Sita Manitkoon, from Mahasarakham University, said that the country has a high diversity in dinosaur fossils and is “possibly the third most abundant in Asia in terms of dinosaur remains”.
The nagatitan roamed Earth when the planet’s atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were rising in line with high global temperatures.
The study’s co-author, UCL’s Prof Paul Upchurch, said the sauropod family of dinosaurs had become quite large at this time, telling National Geographic: “It seems a little odd that sauropods were able to cope with higher temperature conditions”, as large bodies retain heat and are harder to cool down.
He told the Reuters news agency that it was “likely that the high temperatures had an impact on the plant fodder that was important to sauropods, which were very large-bodied herbivores”.
[BBC]
[BBC]
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