Author: BBC News

  • Taylor Swift tour film tops $100m in advance ticket sales

    Taylor Swift tour film tops $100m in advance ticket sales

    The film will open in select cinemas in Kenya this Friday.

    Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour concert film has become a box office blockbuster a week before hitting cinemas.

    Its distributor AMC says global advance ticket sales have topped $100m (KSh. 14.8B), adding demand “has been incredible from the moment it was first announced.”

    The firm says it took less than 24 hours for the movie to beat its record for the highest one-day sales.

    That makes it the most profitable concert film in history, overtaking Justin Bieber’s Never Say Never.

    The Canadian singer’s movie, which mixed documentary footage with live performance, made $99m (KSh. 14.7B) in 2011.

    Swift’s global tour, which is scheduled to continue until late 2024, is also on track to become the biggest in history.

    Stadium ticket sales could reach $1.4bn which would break the record currently held by Elton John for his farewell tour.

    The film of the Eras tour is due to be released in cinemas in more than 100 countries next Friday.

    Analysts estimate that in addition to advance ticket sales, the film could see another $100m of box office takings in North America on its opening weekend.

    Five films – including Barbie, The Super Mario Bros. Movie and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse – have generated more than $100m in their North American debut this year.

    AMC is also distributing the movie of Beyonce’s Renaissance tour, which is set to be released in December.

    Last year, Swift became the first artist in history to have songs in every slot of the top 10 US singles chart.

    She overtook Drake, who held the previous record of nine top 10 singles at the same time in September 2021. The Beatles previously held the record in 1964 with eight singles in the top 10.

    In August, Spotify said Swift broke another record, becoming the first female artist in the streaming platform’s history to reach 100 million monthly listeners.

    The news came after she released her third re-recorded album in July – Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) – which hit the top of the US and UK charts.

    Later this month, Swift will release her next re-recorded album 1989 (Taylor’s Version). She is re-recording her earlier albums because it will allow her to own the songs’ original recordings.

  • PSG quartet land suspended bans for offensive chants

    PSG quartet land suspended bans for offensive chants

    Paris St-Germain’s Ousmane Dembele, Randal Kolo Muani, Layvin Kurzawa and Achraf Hakimi have received suspended one-match bans for offensive chanting.

    The French league (LFP) disciplinary committee acted after the players were filmed singing an insulting song towards Marseille fans following PSG’s 4-0 win against their rivals on 24 September.

    Separately, PSG will also have to close the Auteuil stand at Parc des Princes for one game as a result of fans aiming homophobic chants at Marseille players.

    France internationals Dembele, Muani and Kurzawa, along with Morocco defender Hakimi, apologised for their behaviour on Sunday, saying they let themselves “get carried away with the euphoria” of the win.

    They added: “We are well aware of the impact of our actions and our words on the public, notably the youngest who dream of watching a football match.

    “In the future, we will do everything to further respect our duty to set an example.”

    The stand closure penalty was served as a two-game punishment, but one of those is suspended.

    PSG described it as “excessive” but said there would be no appeal, adding: “The club intends to continue the work it is carrying out with those committed to combating discrimination to change mentalities.”

     

  • Syria war: At least 100 dead in drone attack on cadet graduation ceremony

    Syria war: At least 100 dead in drone attack on cadet graduation ceremony

    A drone attack on a Syrian military academy in the city of Homs has killed at least 100 people and left dozens injured.
    The explosive-laden drones targeted a graduation ceremony attended by cadets’ families, and women and children were among the dead.
    The army blamed “terrorist groups backed by known international forces”.
    There was no immediate claim from the rebels and jihadists battling the government in the country’s civil war.
    The drone attack is believed to have been launched from opposition-held areas north-west of Homs.
    Later, first responders from the White Helmets reported that five civilians had been killed in intense government artillery and missile strikes on several cities, towns and villages in the opposition stronghold of Idlib province.
    Syria’s state news agency, Sana, quoted a statement from the General Command of the Armed Forces as saying that several drones carrying explosives targeted the Homs military academy just after the afternoon graduation ceremony had ended.
    The statement said the armed forces “considers this act an unprecedented criminal one, and affirms that it will respond with full force and determination to these terrorist groups wherever they are”.
    In a later report the agency quoted Health Minister Hassan al-Gabbash saying the strike had injured more than 200 people and that six women and six children were among the dead.
    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported that Syria’s defence minister attended the graduation ceremony but left minutes before the attack.
    More than half a million people have been killed by the civil war that erupted after President Bashar al-Assad cracked down violently on peaceful pro-democracy demonstrations in 2011.
    Some 6.8 million people are internally displaced, while another 6 million are refugees or asylum-seekers abroad.

  • Actor Julia Ormond sues Harvey Weinstein and Disney over sexual assault

    Actor Julia Ormond sues Harvey Weinstein and Disney over sexual assault

    Actor Julia Ormond has filed a lawsuit against Harvey Weinstein, claiming he sexually assaulted her in 1995 after a dinner in New York.

    The Legends of the Fall star is also seeking damages from Disney, Miramax and her former talent agency who she says failed to protect her from abuse.

    The case was filed in New York under a law that allows sex cases to be filed outside of the statute of limitations.

    Weinstein is currently serving a 23-year prison sentence for rape.

    Ormond – best known for roles in 90s films First Knight, Smilla’s Sense of Snow and Sabrina – alleges that her career never recovered after the attack by Weinstein.

    The suit argues that at the peak of her career, she and Weinstein returned from a business dinner to an apartment provided by the production company, where he “stripped naked and forced her to perform oral sex on him”.

    “That sexual assault on Ormond could have been prevented if Miramax or Disney had properly supervised Weinstein and not retained him while knowing that he was a danger to the women he encountered at work,” states the lawsuit, which was filed on Wednesday.

    Weinstein’s attorney Imran Ansari told the Associated Press that his client “categorically denies the allegations made against him by Julia Ormond and he is prepared to vehemently defend himself”.

    Ormond is also suing the Creative Artists Agency (CAA), her former talent agency which she says failed to warn her about Weinstein’s abuse and “suggested that if she reported Weinstein to the authorities, she would not be believed, and he would seriously damage her career”.

    “Still worse, not long after Weinstein’s assault on Ormond and her reporting of the assault to them, CAA lost interest in representing her, and her career suffered dramatically,” the lawsuit adds.

    “The damage to Ormond’s career because of Weinstein’s assault and the aftermath was catastrophic both personally and professionally,” the lawsuit says, adding that she “nearly disappeared from the public eye” since the alleged attack and retaliation by the defendants.

    In a statement issued through her lawyers, the British actor said: “After living for decades with the painful memories of my experiences at the hands of Harvey Weinstein, I am humbled and grateful to all those who have risked speaking out.”

    The “courage” of other survivors has “shed light on how powerful people and institutions like my talent agents at CAA, Miramax and Disney enabled and provided cover for Weinstein to assault me and countless others”.

    “I seek a level of personal closure by holding them accountable to acknowledge their part and the depth of its harms and hope that all of our increased understanding will lead to further protections for all of us at work.”

    The lawsuit asks the court to award Ormond, 58, an unspecified amount for lost wages, and for “mental pain and anguish and severe emotional distress”.

    CAA said they take allegations of sexual assault seriously and “has compassion” for Ms Ormond but denied the claims made against the firm.

    “Ms Ormond’s claims against CAA are baseless, and the agency will vigorously refute them in court,” the organisation said in a statement.

    The BBC has also contacted Disney and Miramax for comment.

    More than 80 people have made rape and misconduct claims against Weinstein, 74, dating back as far as the late 1970s.

  • Jurgen Klopp wants Tottenham-Liverpool replay after VAR error

    Jurgen Klopp wants Tottenham-Liverpool replay after VAR error

    Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp wants the Premier League game against Tottenham to be replayed after Luis Diaz’s goal was wrongly disallowed by the video assistant referee.

    VAR Darren England and assistant Dan Cook did not overrule when Diaz was flagged offside at 0-0 on Saturday.

    Liverpool lost 2-1 thanks to a 96th-minute own goal from Joel Matip.

    “Something like this never happened, so that is why I think a replay is the right thing to do,” said Klopp.

    Referees’ body PGMOL released the audio discussions between the match officials over the offside on Tuesday.

    In the audio, England says the check is “perfect” before swearing when he realises a mistake has been made.

    Klopp said: “The audio didn’t change it at all. It is an obvious mistake. There should be solutions for that. The outcome should be a replay. But it probably won’t happen.

    “The argument against that would be it opens the gates. It is unprecedented. I’m used to wrong and difficult decisions, but something like this never happened.”

    After releasing the audio, PGMOL said the error was a result of a “lapse of concentration and loss of focus”.

    The controversy has prompted a debate about the use and efficacy of VAR.

    There is no precedent in the UK for a result to be changed or a game to be replayed because of a refereeing error.

    A 1999 FA Cup third-round tie was played again after Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger offered Sheffield United a replay following a controversial winning goal in the first game.

    The officials involved in the match at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium have not been selected for this weekend’s Premier League games, with England and Cook stood down for the rest of last weekend.

     

  • Ukraine war: US gives 1.1 million rounds of ammunition seized from Iran to Kyiv

    Ukraine war: US gives 1.1 million rounds of ammunition seized from Iran to Kyiv

    The US has sent roughly 1.1 million bullets seized from Iran last year to Ukraine, its military has said.

    The US Central Command (Centcom), which oversees operations in the Middle East, says the rounds were confiscated from a ship bound for Yemen in December.

    Ukraine’s Western allies recently warned their production lines were struggling to keep up with the rate at which Ukraine was using ammunition.

    Centcom says the Iranian rounds were given to Ukraine on Monday.

    The munitions were originally seized by US naval forces from a stateless ship named MARWAN 1 on 9 December, it said.

    The US government gained ownership of them in July through a process known as civil forfeiture, by which an asset can be seized if its owner is thought to be involved in criminal activity.

    In this case, the claim was brought against Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a branch of the Iranian armed forces tasked with preserving the country’s government.

    Iran backs the Houthi rebels in Yemen’s ongoing civil war, but arms transfers to the group are barred under a 2015 resolution by the UN Security Council.

    The civil war in Yemen began in 2014 when the Houthis took control of the capital Sanaa and removed the country’s government.

    The ousted government remains the internationally recognised government of Yemen and is backed by a Saudi-led coalition of countries in the region as well as the US and the UK.

     

  • Netflix to end free subscription service for Kenyans

    Netflix to end free subscription service for Kenyans

    Streaming service provider Netflix has announced that it will end its free service in Kenya next month as it looks for ways to raise its revenue amid market competition.

    In 2021, Netflix has allowed users in the East African country to access a limited selection of content without paying for a subscription. This was an attempt to tap into Kenya’s growing streaming market.

    In a statement, Netflix says the free plan will no longer be available from 1 November.

    “No action will be required, your membership will be automatically cancelled when the free plan ends,” the company said.

    It encouraged its subscribers to upgrade to the various premium plans offered.

    The move comes months after Netflix reduced subscription prices for its Kenyan subscribers. The streaming giant dropped its rates by 37% amid increasing competition from the likes of Showmax and DStv.

  • Galatasary stun Manchester United in champions league encounter

    Galatasary stun Manchester United in champions league encounter

    Manchester United’s woeful season lurched from one damaging loss to another as Galatasaray took advantage of some calamitous defending to clinch a comeback Champions League win at Old Trafford.
    Ten-man United led twice through young striker Rasmus Hojlund, the second a brilliant effort as the 20-year-old took advantage of Davinson Sanchez’s slip to race 50 yards and beat Fernando Muslera with a deft finish.
    But the hosts could only hold their advantage for a combined 10 minutes, as first old-boy Wilfried Zaha, then Kerem Akturkoglu levelled.
    Then, after Mauro Icardi had failed to convert the penalty that followed a terrible Andre Onana mistake that led to Casemiro’s red card, the Argentine made amends when he sped clear of the hosts’ defence nine minutes from time and found the finish.
    It is the first time United have started a Champions League group stage with successive defeats, and piles the pressure on manager Erik ten Hag, whose side are bottom of the table, four points behind their visitors who are second, behind Bayern Munich.
    United have now lost two on the trot following Saturday’s Premier League home defeat by Crystal Palace, five of their past seven games and six out of 10 in all competitions this season.

  • US House of Representatives votes to oust Speaker Kevin McCarthy

    US House of Representatives votes to oust Speaker Kevin McCarthy

    Kevin McCarthy has been toppled in a right-wing revolt – the first time ever that a US House of Representatives Speaker has lost a no-confidence vote. 

    The final tally was 216-210 to remove the California congressman as leader of the Republican majority in the lower chamber of Congress.

    Ultra-conservatives mutinied after he struck a deal on Saturday with Senate Democrats to fund government agencies.

    There is no obvious successor to oversee the House Republican majority.

    Florida Republican Matt Gaetz, a Trump ally, filed a rarely used procedural tool known as a motion to vacate on Monday night to oust McCarthy.

    He accused the Speaker of making a secret deal with the White House to continue funding for Ukraine, amid negotiations to avert a partial government shutdown at the weekend. McCarthy denies it.

    At a private meeting of Republican lawmakers on Tuesday evening after losing his job, McCarthy told colleagues he did not plan to run for Speaker again.

    He later took aim at his political nemesis, Gaetz, accusing him of attention-seeking.

    “You know it was personal,”  McCarthy told a news conference, “it had nothing to do with spending.”

    He said fundraising emails sent by Gaetz amid the infighting were “not becoming of a member of Congress”.

    He only became Speaker in January after a gruelling 15 rounds of voting in the chamber as Gaetz and other right-wingers refused to support him.

    Just eight Republicans voted to oust McCarthy in Tuesday afternoon’s vote. He was able to muster support from 210 lawmakers – all Republicans.

    But Democrats joined with the Republican defectors to remove the Speaker.

    One vote against Mr Carthy that surprised many came from a moderate Republican, Nancy Mace.

    The South Carolina lawmaker said afterwards: “I am looking for a Speaker who will tell the truth to the American people, who will be honest and trustworthy with Congress, with both parties.”

    Democratic House Leader Hakeem Jeffries had said in a letter to colleagues that he would not provide the votes needed to rescue  McCarthy.

    The packed chamber – which Republicans control by a narrow 221-212 majority – was mostly silent as members awaited the result of the roll call vote.

    “The office of Speaker of the House is hereby declared vacant,” declared Arkansas Republican Steve Womack with a bang of his gavel, to audible gasps.

    Earlier in the day, former US President Donald Trump posted on social media that the party should be “fighting the Radical Left Democrats” instead of each other.

    North Carolina Republican Patrick McHenry, who supported McCarthy, is now the Speaker pro tempore, or interim Speaker. He gavelled the House into recess for a week.

    It is unclear if he will have the full powers of the office, or merely administrative powers and the ability to supervise a new election.

    The rules do not state how long a person could fill in as an interim Speaker, though a vote on a new Speaker is planned for 11 October.

    Louisiana Republican Steve Scalise and Minnesota Republican Tom Emmer have been mentioned as potential contenders to replace McCarthy, though neither has expressed any interest in the role.

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement that President Joe Biden is hoping the House will quickly elect a new Speaker, noting that the “challenges facing our nation will not wait”.

    The last two Republican Speakers – Paul Ryan and John Boehner – left Congress after repeated tangles with their more conservative colleagues.

    The so-called motion to vacate had only previously been used twice in the past century to remove a Speaker – in 2015 and 2010 – though never successfully until Tuesday.

     

     

  • Kenya gets green light to take on gangs in Haiti

    Kenya gets green light to take on gangs in Haiti

    The UN has backed Kenya’s offer to lead a multinational security force in Haiti in response to a plea from the Caribbean nation’s prime minister for help restoring order.

    Haiti has suffered from gang violence for decades but the current wave of brutality escalated after the July 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse.

    Gangs have taken control of large parts of the country, waging terror on residents and killing hundreds.

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres has said that a “robust use of force” is needed to disarm the gangs and restore order.

    Greenlighting the deployment, the UN Security Council resolution approves the mission for a year with a review after nine months.

    The new force will carry out joint security operations and will have the authority to make arrests in coordination with Haitian police, according to the resolution.

    It will also aim to create conditions to hold elections. Haiti has not had an election since 2016.

    Haiti’s Foreign Minister Jean Victor Geneus called the decision “a glimmer of hope for the people that have for too long been suffering.”

    What has Kenya offered to do?

    Kenya has said it would send 1,000 police officers to Haiti.

    When this was first proposed in July, Kenyan officials said the officers would guard government buildings and infrastructure, but that plan changed after Kenya sent a fact-finding mission the following month.

    The country now wants to deploy an intervention force that will neutralise the armed gangs, protect civilians and bring about peace, security and order.

    Foreign Minister Alfred Mutua told the BBC that his country would also like to help Haiti rebuild vital infrastructure and establish a stable democratic government.

    The Bahamas, Jamaica and Antigua and Barbuda have said they will take part in the mission and the minister added that Spain, Senegal and Chile were also likely to deploy security personnel.

    Mr Mutua said he expected the force to be in place by the beginning of next year.

    What will the Kenyan police find in Haiti?

    Haiti is experiencing a multi-faceted security and humanitarian crisis that Mr Guterres called “a living nightmare”.

    Swathes of the mountain-cradled coastal capital Port-au-Prince – some estimates say 80% – are either controlled or regularly terrorised by heavily armed gangs.

    These gangs, with names in Haitian creole such as “Kraze Barye” (Barrier-Crusher) and “Gran Grif” (Big Claw), have over the last two years been robbing, looting, extorting, kidnapping, raping and killing.

    Armed with automatic weapons smuggled in mostly from the US, the gang members often out-gun the local police, sometimes burning their vehicles and stations.

    They control, or regularly raid, the main routes in and out of the capital.

    Similar lawlessness plagues large areas of west and central Haiti, where roving “bandits”, as locals call the gang members, invade and burn villages and towns.

    The gangs have caused chaos and disrupted public services and the work of aid agencies, worsening poverty and health problems in a nation that was already the poorest in the Western Hemisphere.

    What’s in it for Kenya?

    Mr Mutua has in part portrayed this as an altruistic offer.

    “Haiti looked around and said: ‘Kenya, please help us’. They did not ask any other countries. We have decided to do God’s will and assist our brothers and sisters,” Kenya’s foreign minister said at a press conference.

    However, Mr Mutua told the BBC that the intervention in Haiti would raise Kenya’s global profile, which could benefit the country.

    Some commentators have said Kenya is doing the US’s bidding and is hoping to curry favour with the global superpower.

    The US has pledged to support the mission financially to the tune of $100m (£82m) – Canada has also offered funding.

    On a recent visit to Kenya, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin signed a five-year security agreement and also said the US was “grateful to Kenya for its leadership in tackling security challenges in the region and around the world”.

    Are Kenya’s police ready for this kind of mission?

    Many critics have cast doubt on the ability of Kenyan police to take on Haiti’s gangs.

    They will need to come face-to-face with the armed gang members in unfamiliar terrain.

    Nelson Koech, chairperson of parliament’s defence committee, told Citizen TV that Kenya would not be sending traffic officers but “special armed forces” and that they would be fully trained before being deployed.

    It is not clear which units will be sent to Haiti but it could be the paramilitary General Service Unit (GSU), which often responds to events like violent demonstrations and terrorist attacks.

    Mr Mutua also said the government had been preparing for the deployment. He did not divulge any more details, other than saying that the authorities are currently providing French lessons to some of the officers to ease communication in Haiti.

    The language barrier has raised some concerns, as in Haiti people predominantly speak French and Haitian Creole, while in Kenya, the most commonly spoken languages are English and Swahili.