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Not another political World Cup
Not another political World Cup Headaches abound for FIFA as the biggest sporting event in the world kicks off in North America. By ALI WALKER and ZIA WEISEin WASHINGTON Illustration by Natália Delgado/ POLITICO U.S. President Donald Trump is hardly the first World Cup host to seek to score political points from the tournament. For almost a century, leaders ranging from Italian dictator Benito Mussolini to French President Jacques Chirac have done exactly that.
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Otacon Party, a regular event for anime and manga fans held at the Galicia Centre in Buenos Aires, has never been known for being overtly political. Attendees buy comic books and Pikachu plushies, and sing karaoke, often dressed in colourful costumes. But at the February 2019 event, one cosplayer stood out among the rest.
10 iconic moments that shaped World Cup history
The 2026 World Cup kicks off next week in Mexico City, where joint hosts Mexico play South Africa. Every four years, FIFA stages a spectacle that is all but guaranteed to dominate front pages around the world, mostly thanks to events on the pitch. Yet, almost inevitably, the limelight is sometimes stolen by moments that transcend the game.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's dirty gloves fail to garner any bids at auction
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's dirty gloves fail to garner any bids at auction A pair of gloves belonging to the disgraced Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, who manned helicopter operations during the 1982 Falklands conflict, failed to attract a single bid at auction A pair of flying gloves that were worn by Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, when he manned helicopter operations during the conflict in the Falklands in 1982, have failed to attract a single bid at auction. The signed pale leather gloves,...
So You Want a Coat of Arms
The first thing you notice upon entering the College of Arms, in London, is a small and incongruously blue statue of a kiwi, clutching a gold axe in its right claw. Sorry, let me try that again: In the odd historic language of heraldry, this is “a kiwi Azure grasping in the dexter foot an ice axe bendwise Or. ”The bird belongs to the coat of arms of Sir Edmund Hillary, a New Zealander, who was part of the first team to conquer Mount Everest.
British soldier killed during training exercise in Iraq named and pictured
British soldier killed during training exercise in Iraq named and pictured A British army soldier was killed during a training exercise in Iraq on Sunday has been identified as Lance Corporal James Freeman, the MoD has announced. The British soldier who died during a training accident in Iraq on Sunday was 29-year-old Lance Corporal James Freeman of the Royal Anglian Regiment, the Ministry of Defence said. L/Cpl Freeman was killed following an incident at an air base in Erbil, a...