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Standing on their own: Cricket World Cup highlights drive to reclaim public space for Indian women | Emma John

about 14 hours ago
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If there was any better sight than India’s cricketers celebrating victory over Australia on Thursday, it was that of their supporters doing the same.For several hours, the nerves of the 35,000 spectators in Mumbai’s DY Patil Stadium – most wearing Indian blue – had jangled in sympathy.As the home team booked themselves into Sunday’s Cricket World Cup final, the TV cameras picked out the men and women in the stands caught up in the flood of delight and relief.It was more than a moment of triumph – it was a vision of solidarity.But let’s leave the stands, now, and head to the city streets of Indore, the largest city in the state of Madhya Pradesh.

It’s here that a pair of Australia players were sexually harassed as they walked from their hotel to a nearby cafe, the morning after last week’s game against England,They reported the incident, there was an immediate investigation, and a man was shortly arrested: a swift, proactive piece of police work,Which begged the question: how much interest would the authorities have shown if it had happened to anyone other than two high-profile, foreign athletes?If you think this is a cynical take, consider the words of the state minister responsible for urban development in the region’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government,On Sunday Kailash Vijayvargiya told reporters the incident was “a lesson” for the players, who had not taken enough care and should have told someone before venturing out,In other words, the assault was essentially their fault – first, for being famous and attracting attention and second, for being on the street without someone to protect them.

Vijayvargiya’s victim-blaming spectacularly failed to acknowledge the harassment the Australian players faced is common to the experience of being a woman in India,But at least his message was consistent: Indian women, too, are largely expected to deal with the issue themselves, preferably pre-empting the problem by going out accompanied by a man,And so, the threat of intimidation or assault is factored into every woman’s thinking when she steps out in public,She doesn’t walk alone at night,She carries a safety pin on the bus.

She walks from point A to point B, and never lingers along the way.“This need to plot, plan and strategise has come to assume the proportions of a taken-for-granted life-world for all of us,” write Shilpa Ranade and Sameera Khan, co-authors with Shilpa Phadke of Why Loiter? Women and Risk on Mumbai’s Public Streets.Their book was published over a decade ago but the Why Loiter? campaign to reclaim public space continues, vital as ever.It is still rare to see women using public space for leisure activities: even jogging invites comment and unwanted attention.Women’s sport will generally take place in a structured setting, rather than friends mustering ad hoc in parks.

Even in those supposedly safe environments, a culture of male impunity has led to notorious abuses, from wrestling to gymnastics to hockey and, yes, cricket,The strength and conditioning coach Deckline Leitao has a YouTube video on working with female athletes with the satisfyingly blunt title “Learn to Behave!” that lays the problem bare: for instance, he has to remind coaches and physios that athletes are not wearing gym kit to impress or flirt, but for their own comfort,“Understand one thing,” says Leitao: “The bodies that are being built are not for you,”As India’s most popular sport, cricket offers a forum to help change attitudes in the public and private sphere,Educating men is one opportunity it presents: so, too, is empowering women.

When the Women’s Premier League (WPL) launched two years ago, I made a documentary about single women in women’s cricket,Being single is not easy in India, where marriage is considered the primary female goal, and where unmarried women can be shamed and stereotyped as sexually available and a threat to family life,The status and the salaries offered by cricket are allowing a generation of high-profile single women – from Harmanpreet Kaur to Harleen Deol – to model financial independence and life as a woman who is neither a mother nor a daughter-in-law,Chandrakala Sharma, state coordinator for the Rajasthan Single Women’s Association, told me that in rural India even having a job is hard enough for a woman, let alone making her mark on the sports field,She described life for Indian women as an obstacle course they have to navigate their way through: “if they’re encouraged to play sports at an early age they will get the spirit to win,” said Sharma.

“And when they succeed, society’s outlook will change as well.”Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionThat outlook still needs work, if the criticism India’s World Cup team have received is anything to go by (short version – there’s a lot of “stick to the kitchen” on social media).But Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami, both single in their 40s, have spoken about the cultural and societal expectations that create barriers for women in India, and the unusual freedom and independence that their sporting careers have afforded them.“Financially, emotionally, everything, I don’t have to depend on a man for anything,” Raj has said.“I can really stand up on my own.

”The growth of women’s cricket in India will not bring everyone the same professional opportunities.But it can give women purpose and confidence in public spaces – from village communities where women create themselves new roles and status to big cities, where the boom in box cricket offers new ways to take part.At this World Cup, women are dominating the stage not just as players, but as officials, support staff, commentators.And they are out in the stands, too.
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Nexperia halts chip supplies to China in threat to global car production

Nexperia, the EU-based automotive chipmaker at the centre of a geopolitical dispute, has suspended supplies to its Chinese factory, stepping up a trade war that threatens to halt production at carmakers around the world.The company wrote to customers this week informing them all supplies to a Chinese plant had been suspended.In September, the Netherlands used national security laws to take control of the chipmaker, citing concerns that its Chinese owner, Wingtech Technologies, was planning to shift intellectual property to another company it owned. The Dutch government said that threatened the future of European chip capacity, and removed the Wingtech chairman, Zhang Xuezheng, as chief executive.China responded by halting exports from all Nexperia’s factories in China, prompting warnings this week that the embargo would force production lines at EU car factories to close within days

about 4 hours ago
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JP Morgan warned US of $1bn in Epstein transactions possibly related to human trafficking

JP Morgan warned the US government about more than $1bn in transactions linked to Jeffrey Epstein that were possibly related to reports of human trafficking, new documents confirm.The largest bank in the US filed a suspicious activity report (SAR) in 2019, just weeks after Epstein was found dead in a New York jail cell, about transactions linked to the paedophile financier and prominent business figures. It also flagged wire transfers made by Epstein to Russian banks.JP Morgan’s report said it had flagged about 4,700 transactions, totalling more than $1bn, that were potentially related to reports of human trafficking involving Epstein, the New York Times reported. The report, filed during the last Trump administration, also flagged sensitivities around Epstein’s “relationships with two U

about 4 hours ago
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Apple reports record iPhone sales as new lineup reignites worldwide demand

Apple reported its first quarterly earnings since the release of its new lineup of iPhones on Thursday, beating Wall Street analysts’ expectations. The company showed steady financial growth and a strong bottom line despite slow progress on artificial intelligence. The report comes just days after the company hit a $4tn market value for the first time.“Today, Apple is very proud to report a September quarter revenue record of $102.5 billion, including a September quarter revenue record for iPhone and an all-time revenue record for Services,” Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, said in a statement

1 day ago
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Amazon reports strongest cloud growth since 2022 after major outage

Amazon has made its first financial disclosures since the disastrous outage suffered by its cloud computing division that brought everything from smart beds to banks offline.In spite of the global outage, Amazon Web Services has continued to grow, and this quarter reported a 20% increase in revenue year over year. Wall Street estimated that AWS would bring in $32.42bn in net sales in the third quarter, with the company reporting actual revenue of $33bn.“AWS is growing at a pace we haven’t seen since 2022,” CEO Andy Jassy said in a statement accompanying the earnings report

1 day ago
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Liam Lawson cleared of blame by FIA for marshals scare at Mexico Grand Prix

Formula One’s governing body the FIA have issued a statement absolving the Racing Bulls driver Liam Lawson of all blame in an exceptionally dangerous incident when he came close to hitting two marshals running across the track in front of him at the Mexico Grand Prix.The statement is a strong rebuttal to an attempt to hold Lawson responsible made by the Mexican racing federation, the Organización Mexicana De Automovilismo Internacional (Omdai), while the FIA is still carrying out an investigation into the incident.On Tuesday the Omdai issued a statement, not ratified by the FIA, that claimed the marshals should have been “clearly visible” to Lawson and that the New Zealander “did not interrupt his [driving] line despite the obvious presence of marshals on the track”.On Friday the FIA responded by dismissing the assertion. “Having analysed the telemetry from the incident, we can confirm that the driver of Car #30, Liam Lawson, slowed appropriately and reacted correctly to the double yellow flags displayed in the area, braking earlier than in other laps and passing significantly slower than racing speed into Turn 1

about 4 hours ago
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Your Guardian sport weekend: England v Australia x2, Women’s World Cup final and more

An epic World Series returns to Toronto for Game 6 with the Blue Jays one win away from their first championship since 1993. We’ll bring you all the action live.England are 2-0 down in the series but can salvage pride in Wellington. James Wallace and Tanya Aldred will be at the OBO helm, while Simon Burnton reports from Sky Stadium.Billy Munday will bring you all the news and set the scene for the day’s football, which includes seven matches in the Premier League as well as the FA Cup first round

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England looking for northern stronghold to relight Ashes fire after Wembley letdown

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Ireland and All Blacks back in Chicago with memories of 2016 on the mind

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Australia beat India by four wickets: second men’s Twenty20 international – as it happened

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Australia’s Harry Wilson rejects claims Wallabies use illegal breakdown tactics

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‘He’s a true legend’: what now for Frankie Dettori as racing’s biggest name leaves the stage?

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My friend Pancho’s long life is a gift. Most racehorses never get that chance | Elizabeth Banicki

about 13 hours ago