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Berthoumieu’s ban cut to nine games and Feleu also out of Women’s Rugby World Cup

about 11 hours ago
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Axelle Berthoumieu’s ban for biting Ireland’s Aoife Wafer has been reduced to nine matches but Manaé Feleu’s citing was upheld by a disciplinary committee meaning both will miss the rest of the Rugby World Cup,France play England in the semi-finals on Saturday,The pair were cited on Sunday after their 18-13 quarter-final win against Ireland,Berthoumieu was cited for biting Wafer and, while the flanker accepted the foul play, she was appealing against the length of the initial 12-match ban a disciplinary committee proposed on Monday,That had already been reduced from the starting point of 18 matches but was taken down to nine because of her clean previous disciplinary record, remorse and public apology.

Berthoumieu apologised to Wafer on social media on Monday, saying: “I lost my temper Sunday against Ireland.I know this is not acceptable and I am aware that this puts an end to my World Cup.“I would like to apologise to Aoife Wafer and Team Ireland, my teammates and staff, FFR and all those who support us.It’s not the image I want to give, nor the player I want to be.I accept the sanction.

Rugby is a respect sport and this gesture has nothing to do on a rugby field,”Feleu appealed against her three-match ban for a dangerous tackle in the Ireland match because, although the captain accepted foul play had occurred, she did not agree with the proposed sanction,That appeal has been unsuccessful as the committee found: “The tackle was high, it made contact with the head of the Ireland player and the degree of danger was high,”If the lock completes a coaching intervention programme, the ban will be reduced to two games, making her eligible to play after the World Cup concludes,Fans have questioned why in particular Berthoumieu’s bite was not picked up by match officials during the quarter-final.

The tournament’s competition director, Yvonne Nolan, said the “correct process” was followed by officials and added: “These types of incidents are notoriously difficult to deal with in-game.I recognise people will review screenshots and so on and they will have their own views but I would caution that these incidents are really rare.“I don’t think I have ever seen a biting incident being dealt with in-game, they almost always require additional information after the game.That usually includes interviews with the player, ruling out things like accidental contact and they need to establish the force of the contact so a detailed statement from the player is typically needed.It usually needs an inspection of the site of any alleged bite and a review of the bruising or injury as it develops, sometimes even dental evidence becomes relevant over the course of these investigations.

Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotion“I would just say a word of caution of jumping to a conclusion and removing a player unless the evidence is really categoric in-game is really challenging and that is what the citing process is for.It’s there to deal with issues like this and the right process has been gone through.”If France beat England this weekend they will face either Canada or New Zealand in the final on 27 September.Canada and New Zealand’s semi-final takes place on Friday.
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Mandelson not given in-depth vetting before appointment, says Foreign Office

Peter Mandelson was not subject to in-depth security vetting prior to his appointment as ambassador to Washington, the government has said.The Cabinet Office conducted a due diligence process on Mandelson before he was chosen for the role but this was not a security check, the Foreign Office said in a letter to MPs.Mandelson went through the ambassadorial appointment process, including in-depth national security vetting, only after his appointment had been announced to the public.The disclosure, made by the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, and the department’s top official, Oliver Robbins, raises further questions about the lack of rigour involved in Mandelson’s appointment to the top diplomatic post earlier this year.Cooper and Robbins were responding to a set of written questions from the foreign affairs select committee

about 11 hours ago
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Starmer urged to apologise to Epstein victims over Mandelson appointment — as it happened

Davey says MPs should consider the victims of Epstein.He asks what they would have felt about Donald Trump, a close friend of Epstein, becoming president of the US.Referring to his decision to boycott the Trump state banquet, he says even if he had gone he would not have had a chance to speak to Trump about this.But Keir Starmer will get the chance. Davey says Starmer should ask Trump about his relationship with Epstein

about 12 hours ago
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We must tackle rising tide of racism and homophobia claiming to be free speech, says Streeting

Wes Streeting has called it “laughable” that rising racism and homophobia is a sign of free speech in a strongly worded intervention suggesting Labour needed to step up its defence of minorities.The health secretary told the LGBT foundation on Monday he wanted to address “the elephant in the room” and said he understood why some were questioning “whether this government is really on our side”.He said the scenes of far-right protests over the weekend were “not the kind of country any of us want to live in”.He told an audience of healthcare workers: “Black and Asian members of our community have the added fear of an undercurrent, increasingly visible tide of racism in our country that cloaks itself in our country’s flag and laughably claims to be a champion of ‘free speech’.“Free speech, that is, unless that freedom includes the right to worship a different God, or the right to march through central London protesting atrocities in Gaza or the right just to walk down Oxford Street without being called the p-word, the n-word, or having your hijab ripped, ripped off

about 15 hours ago
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Maria Caulfield becomes latest senior Tory to defect to Reform UK

Another senior Conservative has defected to Reform UK, with the former health minister Maria Caulfield saying she signed up to Nigel Farage’s party a month ago.Although Caulfield is no longer an MP after losing her Lewes seat to the Liberal Democrats last year, it is another blow for the Tories, a day after Danny Kruger, a sitting Tory MP and the shadow work and pensions minister, announced he had moved to Reform.A series of senior Conservatives have shifted over in recent months, although Kruger is so far the only one still in parliament.Caulfield, who was an MP for nine years and served as a junior health minister, as well as a junior minister for women and a Tory party vice-chair, told GB News: “If you are Conservative right-minded, then the future is Reform. The country is going to change a lot

about 17 hours ago
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UK public has paid £200bn to shareholders of key industries since privatisation

The public has paid almost £200bn to the shareholders who own key British industries since they were privatised, research reveals.The transfer of tens of billions of pounds to the owners of the privatised water, rail, bus, energy and mail services comes as families face soaring bills, polluted rivers and seas, and expensive and unreliable trains and buses.As a result, citizens have been paying a “privatisation premium” of £250 per household per year since 2010 alone, the analysis found.Recent focus has been on the privatised water industry, which has run up long-term debts of £73bn and paid out dividends of £88.4bn in the past 34 years at the same time as overseeing record sewage spills, according to the latest figures

about 19 hours ago
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‘There’s a basic decency among British people’: Hope Not Hate’s Nick Lowles on how to defeat the far right

Lowles has spent his entire adult life organising against fascism, facing countless threats as a result. He discusses the street confrontations of the 80s, foiling a murder plot, Nazi satanists – and the urgent need for optimism and actionIn 1979, a 10-year-old Nick Lowles saw a hard-right party political broadcast. Born in Hounslow in London, he had moved to Shrewsbury when he was seven: “A very white town. There was a British Movement march soon after we moved up there.” Theirs was a “small-P political household”

about 20 hours ago
businessSee all
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Sky puts 900 roles at risk in shake-up to compete with US streaming services

about 15 hours ago
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How an engineering student turned red Solo cups into stylish sweaters: ‘A lot of trial and error’

about 16 hours ago
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UK pay growth stays high – but Britons are feeling the pinch

about 21 hours ago
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Big pharma firms have paused nearly £2bn in UK investments this year

about 24 hours ago
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Healthy, safe and getting along with each other: Australia attempts to look beyond GDP to measure what matters

1 day ago
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Trump official confirmed to Fed board but court rejects Lisa Cook removal bid

1 day ago