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Royal Opera House calls for release of Georgian bass singer jailed over democracy protests

11/5/2026
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The Royal Opera House in London has urged Keir Starmer to intervene in the case of Paata Burchuladze, a world-renowned bass singer who has been imprisoned in Georgia since October on a charge of leading a coup against the country’s authoritarian leader,The 71-year-old has performed at the Royal Opera House and the Metropolitan Opera House in New York and collaborated with the likes of Luciano Pavarotti, Plácido Domingo and José Carreras,He was arrested after joining a protest outside the presidential palace in the Georgian capital, Tbilisi,Last week he was given a seven-year jail sentence which Burchuladze suggested to the court was equivalent to a life sentence given his age,Burchuladze became a rallying figure at nightly demonstrations against the government’s perceived pivot away from the west last autumn.

He frequently sang to protesters from the back of a flatbed truck in freezing temperatures, and on 4 October he read out at a declaration claiming “power returns to the people” and calling the government “illegitimate”.He was subsequently detained with nine others accused of organising violence against the ruling regime, which is in effect led by Georgia’s richest man, the billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili.Ivanishvili is the chair of the ruling party, Georgian Dream, and was hit with sanctions by the US in 2024 for undermining Georgia’s democracy for the benefit of Vladimir Putin and Russia.In a letter to the British prime minister, the Royal Opera’s director of casting, Peter Katona, claimed that Burchuladze was “being punished as a warning to others who dare oppose the regime”.He wrote: “I am writing to draw your urgent attention to the situation of the world-renowned Georgian opera singer and our dear friend Paata Burchuladze, who is currently held in pre-trial detention and is under the criminal investigation by the pro-Russian, authoritarian regime in Georgia.

“The charges brought against Mr Burchuladze are entirely fabricated and unlawful.He is being persecuted solely because of his critical stance toward the ruling regime.”Katona told Starmer that Burchuladze had had a distinguished career at the Royal Opera House and had performed there many times over the years since his debut in 1984.“We are also considering to invite him again, also in the future in more senior roles,” he said.“Unfortunately, Paata Burchuladze is now among more than 100 political prisoners in Georgia.

During recent peaceful demonstrations, more than 500 people were arrested, and more than 300 reported torture and ill treatment,“Your attention and solidarity would mean a great deal to the people of Georgia, who are striving to preserve freedom, human rights, and their democratic future,” Katona said,It is understood that the Royal Ballet and Opera has not received a response from Downing Street,The Foreign Office has said it is monitoring developments closely and will “raise, where appropriate, the importance of safeguarding detainees’ rights, including access to legal representation and family communication”,Burchuladze, who was born in Tbilisi, has been a high-profile pro-democracy campaigner in Georgia for more than a decade and formed a short-lived political party in 2016.

He has also served as a goodwill ambassador for the UN and Unicef.In a statement made shortly before he was sentenced last week, Burchuladze said: “I am convinced that recognisable figures such as myself, however comfortable our circumstances, must stand at the forefront and set an example in the fight to defend our homeland.”During a previous court appearance, Burchuladze warned that the Georgian government was building an “iron fence” between Georgia and the west.The appeal by Britain’s Royal Opera has been echoed by Christina Scheppelmann, the general artistic director at Belgium’s national opera, La Monnaie, in Brussels.In a letter to the Belgian prime minister, Scheppelmann wrote: “It is evident that Mr Burchuladze cannot receive a fair trial.

Like other political detainees, his fundamental rights are being violated and he is being punished as a warning to others who dare oppose the regime.”Burchuladze is among 114 people in Georgia who have either been sentenced to jail or are being held in detention related to protests.The EU has suspended its negotiations over Georgia’s accession to the bloc as a result of the regime’s democratic backsliding.Eka Gigauri, from the anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International, said: “These cases illustrate a clear pattern of punishment aimed at silencing those who oppose the ruling party’s pro-Russian policies and who peacefully defend Georgia’s democratic future in the face of increasing authoritarianism.”
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The Spin | ‘We have a hoot on the field’: Oswestry CC boasts 10 mother-daughter pairs

Women and Girls section has built strong family dynamic since launching in 2018 – and embraced Wags monikerThe acronym Wags first entered popular consciousness in 2006 during England’s football World Cup adventures in Baden-Baden. Victoria Beckham, Cheryl Tweedy and the gang became a sneering tabloid obsession, their matching outfits, nightclub antics and hair extensions gleefully picked apart.Twenty years later, a very different set of Wags are causing a stir at Oswestry Cricket Club on the north Shropshire-Wales border. The thriving Women and Girls section (WaGs) has an astonishing 10 mother and daughter pairs who have played competitive cricket together, ranging from 12 years old to 67.The oldest member is the irrepressible Jools Payne, team manager and founding player

13/5/2026
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From the Pocket: Voss coached the way he played and his brutal football failed Carlton

When John Elliott died in 2021, the old, dark, imperial Carlton was dead. The new Carlton was grounded on “respect, humility and integrity”. The new president was a master networker. The new chief executive was the best administrator in football. The new coach had been one of the great players of his generation

13/5/2026
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Cleary to finish up as Panthers coach and end greatest modern-day NRL dynasty

Ivan Cleary has 18 months remaining in his current role at the Penrith Panthers before the four-time premiership-winning NRL coach steps aside and his assistant Peter Wallace takes over.The 55-year-old announced on Wednesday he would not renew his contract when it expires at the end of next season, but will remain in Penrith in an advisory role beyond 2027.He said he had mulled over the decision for the past 12 months.“It’s a decision that I haven’t taken lightly,” Cleary said. “But I’ve thought about [it] for quite a long time

13/5/2026
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Billy Knight obituary

Billy Knight, who has died aged 90, was a stalwart of British tennis long before Andy Murray changed the landscape of the game in the UK.During the 1950s and 60s – an era that saw his compatriots Mike Davies, Bobby Wilson and Mike Sangster struggle to challenge the dominance of Australian and American players – Knight racked up 47 singles titles, won 21 of his 34 Davis Cup matches and earned a grand slam title at Roland Garros by teaming up with Mexico’s Yola Ramirez to win the French mixed doubles crown. Earlier he had been a Wimbledon and Australian junior champion.Unusually for a British player, Knight was a clay court specialist. With a game based on powerful ground strokes and an effective left handed serve, he won the British Hard Court Championships at Bournemouth three times (in 1958, 1963 and 1964) and, on the slowest of red clay courts in Hamburg, took the German title over the South African No 1, Ian Vermaak, in 1959

12/5/2026
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Rory McIlroy claims he knew LIV was in trouble and breakaway tour was always a ‘risk’

Rory McIlroy has revealed he heard rumblings of impending trouble for LIV Golf weeks before Saudi ­Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) ­confirmed it would withdraw funding for the circuit. The Masters champion believes the PIF approach highlights the danger of sport ­becoming reliant on anything that can be affected by world affairs.LIV is engaged in a race against time to survive with PIF, which has bestowed more than $5bn (£3.7bn) on the tour, to exit at the end of 2026. News of that, which emerged in the immediate aftermath of ­McIlroy’s ­successful defence at Augusta National last month, shocked those within LIV but not the Northern Irishman

12/5/2026
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Jake Paul admits broken jaw from Anthony Joshua fight may have ended boxing career

Jake Paul has admitted the broken jaw he suffered during his loss to Anthony Joshua in December may have ended his boxing career.The YouTuber turned boxer was stopped during December’s fight after a brutal shot from former world champion Joshua. Paul said the injury is still being monitored five months later.“We’ll see what my doctors say,” Paul told Uncrowned on Monday. “I’ll be able to get a more accurate timeframe, or can I even fight again? That is definitely in the realm and possibilities of things [that I can’t]

12/5/2026
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Global oil inventories falling at record pace amid Iran war; US producer price inflation hits four-year high – as it happened

13/5/2026
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Lab testing group Intertek to back £10.6bn takeover by Swedish firm EQT

13/5/2026
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Fortescue ordered to pay Yindjibarndi traditional owners $150m in record native title payout

12/5/2026
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British Steel: more questions than answers on the future | Nils Pratley

11/5/2026
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E.ON agrees to buy Ovo in deal to create UK’s biggest energy supplier

11/5/2026
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Thinktank calls for ‘double lock’ England private rent cap to ease living costs

11/5/2026