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  • Post-Covid surge in heart disease raises alarm

    Post-Covid surge in heart disease raises alarm


    KARACHI:

    The coronavirus pandemic left behind a trail of devastation that went far beyond infections and immediate deaths. Now, years after the initial outbreak, health systems worldwide are grappling with a new and alarming challenge: a sharp rise in heart disease and related fatalities. 

    From Karachi to London, and from New York to Dar es Salaam, cardiologists report a noticeable increase in heart attacks, cardiac emergencies, and mortality among both older and younger populations. Yet, the reasons behind this surge remain hotly debated.

     A troubling trend in Karachi

    In Karachi, one of South Asia’s largest urban centres, hospitals are witnessing a surge in patients with cardiac complaints. Doctors note that cases of heart attack, previously more common among the elderly, are now appearing among younger adults – even teenagers.

    “Before the pandemic, between 2018 and 2019, our hospital admitted around 1,000 to 1,500 patients annually for urgent cardiac procedures such as angioplasty, angiography, or bypass surgery,” explained Dr. Farhala Baloch, consultant cardiologist at Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH). “Since 2021, the number has more than doubled, with 2,500-3,000 patients every year. While modern facilities have helped us save many lives, we are deeply concerned about the increasing number of younger patients who do not survive massive heart attacks.”

    One of the most alarming developments, according to Dr. Baloch, is the appearance of cardiogenic shock – a severe condition where the heart suddenly cannot pump enough blood – in patients as young as 40, and in some cases even 18-year-olds. “This was rarely seen before. It represents a dramatic shift in the pattern of heart disease,” she noted.

     Is COVID-19 to blame?

    The surge has naturally raised questions about causation. Did Covid -19 itself trigger long-term cardiovascular damage? Did vaccines play a role? Or are lifestyle changes during the pandemic the real culprit?

    “Some patients with severe Covid who required ICU care later developed heart complications. We know the virus severely impacted the lungs, but the heart was often the second most affected organ,” said Dr. Baloch. “When oxygen supply in the body drops, the heart suffers. This often leads to multi-organ failure. However, to say the virus directly caused the global rise in heart attacks is still premature.”

    What is clearer is the indirect impact. Lockdowns confined millions to their homes, leading to reduced physical activity, poor eating habits, disrupted sleep patterns, and increased stress. Remote work, initially perceived as convenient, proved more stressful for many – particularly working women who had to balance professional and domestic responsibilities. Obesity levels rose, and with it, hypertension and diabetes – two of the strongest risk factors for cardiovascular disease.

    “In our clinics, we see many patients who gained significant weight during lockdowns and are struggling to lose it,” Dr. Baloch added. “These changes have lasting effects on cardiovascular health.”

     The vaccine debate

    Alongside the pandemic, the global vaccination drive triggered a parallel wave of anxiety and speculation. Some vaccine recipients reported chest pain, palpitations, or high blood pressure. This led to rumours that vaccines themselves were fueling heart disease.

    Dr. Baloch urged caution: “There is no conclusive evidence linking Covid -19 vaccines to heart attacks. Vaccines saved millions of lives. Some patients did experience temporary side effects such as irregular heartbeat or elevated blood pressure, but these effects were short-lived. Suggesting vaccines are harmful discourages people from taking not only Covid vaccines but also flu and pneumonia vaccines, which are lifesaving, especially for older adults and cardiac patients.”

    International studies have shown mixed results. A few small-scale investigations reported higher rates of myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle) in young men after vaccination, particularly following the second dose. However, these cases were typically mild and treatable. Meanwhile, large-scale data suggests that vaccinated populations had lower mortality rates overall, with protection outweighing potential risks.

    Data from NICVD

    The National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases (NICVD) in Karachi – the largest heart hospital in South Asia – also reports a growing patient load. In 2024 alone, NICVD treated nearly 10,000 heart attack patients, performing more than 3,000 complex cardiac procedures, including bypass surgeries and valve replacements.

    “This reflects not only population growth but also a real increase in the burden of disease,” said an NICVD spokesperson. “We are treating younger patients than ever before, which is particularly concerning.”

     A global phenomenon

    The post- Covid cardiac crisis is not limited to Pakistan. Studies across Europe, North America, and Africa report similar patterns. Dr. Javed Ahmed Jilbani, a cardiologist at the Aga Khan Hospital in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, who previously worked at NICVD, has seen this transformation firsthand.

    “During lockdowns, heart attack cases temporarily declined because people avoided hospitals. But once restrictions were lifted, we observed a fourfold increase globally,” he said.

    What stunned doctors was the speed of disease progression. “In the past, coronary artery disease typically advanced over 15-20 years. Post-Covid, we saw patients whose arteries worsened dramatically in just five years. It is as though the pandemic accelerated the natural course of heart disease,” Dr. Jilbani explained.

     The genetics factor

    Recent research highlights another dimension: genetics. A study published using UK Biobank data revealed that individuals with blood groups A, B, or AB face higher risks of heart attack and stroke compared to those with blood group O.

    This suggests that genetic predispositions may interact with Covid -19 or post-pandemic lifestyle factors to heighten cardiovascular risk.

    Vaccination trends and outcomes

    Interestingly, global trends show that heart attack cases initially rose after the first and second vaccine doses, then began to decline after the third dose. Younger populations reported more cases of myocarditis, while older groups remained at risk of strokes and heart attacks.

    Experts argue that while vaccines may have short-term cardiovascular effects in rare cases, they likely reduced long-term risks by preventing severe COVID-19 infections.

    “Early data did show higher death rates after initial vaccination drives, but whether these deaths were due to COVID, vaccines, or other health conditions remains a matter of investigation,” said Dr. Jilbani. “What is certain is that the third dose reduced cardiac risks significantly.”

    Lifestyle and healthcare responses

    The pandemic reshaped daily life in profound ways. Increased reliance on processed foods, lack of exercise, disrupted mental health, and prolonged stress all combined to create a fertile ground for cardiovascular disease.

    Healthcare systems are now adapting. In Pakistan, angioplasty and stent procedures have surged. The Healthcare Devices Association of Pakistan reported a sharp increase in demand for cardiac devices post-pandemic, reflecting both rising cases and improved access to treatments.

    But prevention remains the key. Cardiologists urge the public to adopt healthier lifestyles, manage stress, and undergo regular checkups, particularly for blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar levels.

    Looking ahead

    Experts agree on one thing: more research is urgently needed. The link between Covid -19 and heart disease is complex and likely involves multiple factors – direct viral effects, immune responses, vaccines, lifestyle changes, and genetics.

    “What we know so far is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Dr. Baloch. “We must resist the temptation to jump to conclusions. Science takes time. But what is clear is that heart disease has emerged as a major post- Covid challenge, and societies must be prepared to confront it.”

    For now, the best defense remains vigilance – both in research laboratories and in everyday life. As the world continues to navigate the pandemic’s long shadow, the battle for heart health may well define the next decade of global healthcare.

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  • Palestinians to ask UK to own up to ‘law violations’ between 1917 and 1948 | Palestinian territories

    Palestinians to ask UK to own up to ‘law violations’ between 1917 and 1948 | Palestinian territories

    A group of Palestinians will serve a legal petition asking the UK to take responsibility for what they call “serial international law violations”, including war crimes committed during the British occupation of Palestine from 1917 to 1948, the consequences of which it says still reverberate today.

    The 400-plus page document, drafted by human rights KCs, details “incontrovertible evidence” of the UK’s unlawful legacy.

    This includes the 1917 Balfour declaration, acting as an occupying power during the mandate period – an authority to rule the territory that it says had no legal basis – and the subsequent “systematic abuse” of the Palestinian people.

    The submission says the Palestinian people face their gravest crisis since 1948, which Britain bears its own distinct responsibility for and so owes them a special debt.

    Among the petitioners is the 91-year-old philanthropist Munib al-Masri, who was shot in the leg by British soldiers when he was 13.

    The submission, served on the UK government on Sunday, marks the launch of a campaign, Britain Owes Palestine, which is pressing for official UK acknowledgment of wrongdoing, apology and reparations for what it calls a “century of oppression”.

    A legal petition is a formal request to the government to act based on evidence and legal analysis, often used by victims of colonial wrongdoing. If the government does not respond it could lead to judicial review proceedings at the high court in London.

    Al-Masri, a Nablus-born businessman, who was a close friend of the late Palestinian political leader Yasser Arafat, said: “The current crisis in Palestine was ‘made in Britain’ through a catalogue of neglect and abuse of the Palestinian people. Together we have suffered more than a century of oppression.

    “Britain can only play its part in building a just peace in the region today if it acknowledges its defining role in the horrors of the past. An apology would be a just start to what Palestinians expect from the British government.”

    His written statement, accompanying the petition, recalls British troops rounding up large numbers of men, escorting them through towns with their hands and feet bound with rope, and later holding them in cages prior to execution.

    There is precedent for the UK government making concessions of the kind the petition calls for. On 31 March, it apologised for the Batang Kali massacre in colonial Malaya in December 1948, which was the latest of five such apologies.

    The petition, which has been years in the making, says that Britain unlawfully failed to recognise an Arab nation in Palestine even though it had pledged to do so in the McMahon–Hussein correspondence, a contested series of letters exchanged during the first world war.

    Britain is said to have unlawfully repressed the population of Palestine, particularly during the suppression of the Arab revolt from 1936 to 1939, by adopting a form of statutory martial law that subjected Palestinians to a pattern of murder, torture, persecution, arbitrary detention and other inhumane acts, committing war crimes and crimes against humanity.

    Britain is also said to bear responsibility for the destruction of the single unitary territory of Palestine and for failing to protect and promote the rights of the indigenous Palestinian Arab people in its withdrawal. The petition is not concerned with contesting the post-1948 recognition of Israel in international law.

    Ben Emmerson, a former UN special rapporteur on human rights and counter-terrorism and one of two KCs – the other being Danny Friedman – working on the case, said: “This petition demonstrates, by reference to a comprehensive analysis of contemporary evidence, the extent of British responsibility for the terrible suffering in Palestine, which can be traced back to Britain’s violations of international law during its occupation and subsequent withdrawal.

    “These historic injustices continue to shape the realities on the ground today. Britain owes a debt to the Palestinian people. Today’s petition is based upon the international obligations of the United Kingdom to make amends.”

    All 14 of the petitioners have been affected by Britain’s alleged violations and the dispersal of Palestinians, and several lived through them.

    As a 14-year-old, Saeed Husain Ahmad Haj witnessed Israeli paramilitary Haganah forces entering his village of Tireh Dandan in what is now the district of Lod in July 1948.

    The incursion was part of Operation Dani, which led to his family’s expulsion to the Balata refugee camp in Nablus where Haj still lives.

    The action seeks accountability based on the standards of international law that applied at the time of the British occupation and the Balfour declaration, in which the British government pledged to establish a Jewish homeland in Palestine.

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  • Surprise if there’s no ‘lowering of attachment points on property cat,’ says Fitch’s Arrivé

    Surprise if there’s no ‘lowering of attachment points on property cat,’ says Fitch’s Arrivé

    Property catastrophe rates are expected to decline at year-end, but a number of factors will keep underwriting discipline, Brian Schneider, Senior Director at Fitch Ratings noted at RVS 2025 in Monaco, with Manuel Arrivé, CFA, Director, suggesting that it’s likely reinsurers could participate lower down on programmes to meet demand from cedents.

    In his comments, Schneider noted the softening that the market is starting to experience and stated that companies are trying to keep away from that softening area, and have become more demanding as to what the returns should be.

    “It feels like a different market,” said Schneider. “I think investors have better, higher expectations as to what return should be. We’re not seeing the ILS market push the overall market down, like maybe we would have seen in the last soft market. And we see that investors in the ILS space are demanding better returns for their risk.

    “They have understood that risk is increasing, so they’re going to demand returns for their risk. Therefore, I think that those types of things will help to keep things disciplined.”

    He added: “And then on the casualty side, certainly some of the issues that we see around – like social inflation, some of the nuclear verdicts and litigation funding. I think factors like these keep a lot of pressure on the underwriters to be disciplined in the casualty market.”

    Brit Re - Experienced underwriting backed by strong capital

    According to Arrivé, underwriting discipline is going to be one of the key themes going forward.

    He said: “I would say that reinsurers are going to loosen the standards. They are starting from a very high point and they are still looking to grow. As mentioned before, growth is going to be difficult.

    “There is also demand from cedents to insure higher frequency, and manage earnings volatility, which if they want to grow, they will have to loosen some of the terms and conditions.”

    Arrivé concluded: “So, we will be surprised if there is not a lowering in attachment points on property cat going forward.”

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  • Israel's Ramon Airport near Eilat reopens after being hit by drone from Yemen – Reuters

    1. Israel’s Ramon Airport near Eilat reopens after being hit by drone from Yemen  Reuters
    2. Yemen’s Houthis claim responsibility for drone attack on Israeli airport  Al Jazeera
    3. Sirens fail as Houthi drone hits arrivals hall at Ramon Airport in southern Israel, authorities say  CNN
    4. Israel says drone launched from Yemen struck arrivals hall at Ramon airport  Dawn
    5. Airspace closed over Ramon Airport after Houthi explosive drone impact  The Times of Israel

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  • Geraint Thomas brings curtain down on glittering career

    Geraint Thomas brings curtain down on glittering career

    At the finish line on Sunday, conducting interviews while his five-year-old son Macs clutched his leg, he allowed his feelings to flow a little more freely.

    “I wish I had tinted glasses, not the rain ones where you can still see my eyes,” Thomas joked.

    “That’s what gets me every time, you know, seeing him [Macs] and Sa [wife Sara]. He’s just well into it now and I never thought I’d still be going when he was at the age to really remember it.

    “So that’s really nice as well, that he can take it all in and then enjoy it and remember it.”

    Thomas’ family have followed him all over the world, been there for some crushing lows as well as the soaring highs.

    Having picked him up after crashing out of Grand Tours and nursed him through enough injuries to make a surgeon wince, wife Sara and the rest know better than anyone that these are the moments to savour.

    From the start of the stage, through its windiest, wettest and coldest peaks on the Gwent hillsides, right through to its finish in Cardiff city centre, the sheer number of supporters out on the course was something to behold.

    Thomas was blown away, almost rendered speechless. In his defence, though, how do you adequately summarise – in the immediate aftermath of a day’s racing – that show of appreciation for a career which has spanned three decades and yielded two Olympic gold medals, three world titles, a Commonwealth gold, countless other race wins and cycling’s greatest prize of all, the Tour de France?

    You can’t, not really, but the masses who lined streets and mountaintops from Suffolk to south Wales over the past week did a decent job of demonstrating what Thomas means to people.

    And as passionate as they were – the cut-out Thomas facemasks were a highlight – they represented only a tiny cross-section of his following.

    Thomas has been handed Welsh cakes by well-wishers at the Giro d’Italia, inspired road graffiti in the French countryside and counts the actor Ben Stiller among his celebrity fans.

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  • MTV VMAs 2025 Winners List

    MTV VMAs 2025 Winners List

    The 2025 Video Music Awards are being handed out Sunday night.

    Heading into the show, Lady Gaga is the leading nominee with 12 total VMA noms, followed by Bruno Mars with 11 and Kendrick Lamar with 10. All three will compete for video of the year: Gaga and Mars for their collaboration “Die With a Smile,” Mars and Rosé for their collab “APT.” and Lamar for “Not Like Us.” The other nominees in that category are Ariana Grande’s “Brighter Days Ahead,” Billie Eilish’s “Birds of a Feather,” Sabrina Carpenter’s “Manchild” and The Weeknd and Playboy Carti’s “Timeless.”

    This year, the VMAs added two new categories: best pop artist and best country video.

    The VMAs will air live coast-to-coast starting at 5 p.m. Sunday from UBS Arena in Elmont, New York, with LL Cool J serving as host. The show will air on CBS for the first time in addition to their longtime home on MTV and stream live on Paramount+ (for subscribers to the service’s premium plan). (See a list of the wildest VMA moments of all time.)

    Former MTV head Van Toffler and his company Gunpowder & Sky is producing the 2025 VMAs along with Den of Thieves.

    The full list of nominees below will updated with the winners as they are announced live. Refresh for the latest.


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  • Deals: Samsung Galaxy S25 FE and Tab S11 are here, we also look at alternatives

    Deals: Samsung Galaxy S25 FE and Tab S11 are here, we also look at alternatives

    Samsung announced the Galaxy S25 FE this week, a more affordable variant of its flagship S-series. Also new this week are flagship tablets, the Galaxy Tab S11 and Tab S11 Ultra. Let’s have a look at what kind of offers are available.

    There’s no pre-order for the Samsung Galaxy S25 FE, the phone went on sale immediately. You can pick up a unit right now with a free storage upgrade (128GB to 256GB) and a $100 Amazon Gift Card.

    Just last week, the Galaxy S24 FE was down to $460 for the base 8/128GB model. However, those offers have dried up. They may come back if there’s enough stock, but is the older model worth it?

    Samsung shaved 23g off the weight of the new FE and 0.6mm off the thickness (to 190g and 7.4mm). At the same time, the company increased the battery capacity to 4,900mAh (+200mAh). Not just that, wired charging rate was boosted to 45W (0-65% in 30 min, compared to 0-50% in 30 min on the old FE) and wireless to 25W (up from 25W and 15W, respectively). Also, the regular Exynos 2400 chipset (instead of the 2400e) has higher clock speeds.


    Alternatively, you could look at the Galaxy S25+, but there are no offers on that model this week either.

    Instead, we turn to the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge, which has a sizable discount. The 12/256GB model is $50 more than the S25 FE – $150 more if you count the gift card.

    The S25 Edge is even thinner and lighter (163g, 5.8mm), though with a 3,900mAh battery (1,000mAh less than the FE). However, the 6.7” display has a higher resolution (1440p+ vs. 1080p+) and is an LTPO panel. And instead of last year’s Exynos 2400, the Edge has this year’s Snapdragon 8 Elite. The Edge has a dual camera setup with a 200MP main that is also tasked with zooming in – the S25 FE has a 50MP main and an 8MP 3x/75mm telephoto lens.


    Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge

    A cheaper Samsung with a 6.7” 1080p+ OLED display (non-LTPO) is the Galaxy A56. Its Exynos 1580 is no match for the 2400, however. Also, it misses the dedicated telephoto camera, keeping only a 50MP main and a 12MP ultra-wide. The 5,000mAh battery supports 45W wired charging, but lacks wireless. Still, even with the $100 gift card, the S25 FE is $50 more expensive than the A56.


    Samsung Galaxy A56

    The OnePlus 13R has been holding at $500 for quite a while now. It uses last year’s flagship chip, but it’s a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3. And its 6.78” display is a higher resolution 1268p+ LTPO panel. There’s a dedicated telephoto camera, a 50MP 2x/47mm module. The battery is larger and faster (6,000mAh, 80W), but there’s no wireless charging support.


    OnePlus 13R

    There’s another FE phone, the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7 FE. We’ve seen it as low as $700 for 8/128GB and $760 for 8/256GB, though it’s at MSRP this week. This model also uses the Exynos 2400 chipset and has a 6.7” 1080p+ LTPO OLED display. Flip phones are more compact than rigid phones with the same size screen. Battery capacity is an issue, though – this one has a 4,000mAh battery with 25W wired and 15W wireless charging.


    Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7 FE

    For a cheap flip, the Motorola Razr 2025 is down to $600. It features a 6.9” inner display and 3.6” cover display (a bit bigger than the 3.4” on the Z Flip7 FE). It’s let down by the Dimensity 7400X chipset, but it has a larger 4,500mAh battery with 30W wired and 15W wireless charging.


    Motorola Razr 2025

    Also from Motorola is the Edge (2025). This one has a 6.7” OLED display (1220p+) and unlike many of the phones above, it does have a dedicated telephoto camera (10MP 3x/73mm) plus 50MP main and 50MP ultra-wide. The battery is 5,200mAh with fast 68W wired and 15W wireless charging. The Edge is powered by the Dimensity 7400 Ultra chipset.


    Motorola Edge (2025)

    Moving over to tablets, the Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 is an 11” slate powered by the Dimensity 9400+. As you may remember, the Tab S10 generation lacked an 11” model – it only had a 12.4” Plus tablet. Well, the Tab S11 generation lacks a Plus model.


    Samsung Galaxy Tab S11

    We didn’t see any good deals on the larger 14.6” Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra, we’ll check again next week.

    Meanwhile, the Galaxy Tab S10+ is still around and costs more than the Tab S11. As mentioned above, it has a larger display, however, it also uses an older chipset – the Dimensity 9300+.


    Samsung Galaxy Tab S10+

    The previous flagship 11” slate was the Galaxy Tab S9. Being two years old, it is now $130 less than the Tab S11. However, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 has fallen off compared to current Dimensity 9000-series chips.


    Samsung Galaxy Tab S9

    If you want something even cheaper, there is the Galaxy Tab S10 FE and Tab S10 FE+ duo with 10.9” and 13.1” IPS LCDs (90Hz instead of 120Hz). These use the mid-range Exynos 1580 chipset, however, so even the old Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 is faster.


    Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE


    Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE+

    There’s also the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Lite with a 10.9” LCD (90Hz). This one is cheaper than the Tab S10 FE, but uses the even older Exynos 1380. Seeing how the price difference is only $80 between these two, we’re leaning towards the FE tablet.


    Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Lite

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  • Kuo: AirPods Pro 3 Coming Soon, But Bigger Upgrade Arriving Next Year

    Kuo: AirPods Pro 3 Coming Soon, But Bigger Upgrade Arriving Next Year

    Apple plans to release AirPods Pro 3 this year, according to supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo.

    All signs point towards Apple unveiling the AirPods Pro 3 during its iPhone 17 event on Tuesday, September 9. However, Kuo did not provide a specific timeframe beyond the second half of 2025, which lines up with previous rumors.

    Kuo did not mention any new features that are planned for the AirPods Pro 3. However, Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman recently reported that the AirPods Pro 3 will likely have the same heart rate monitoring feature that Apple introduced on the Powerbeats Pro 2 earlier this year, along with a significantly smaller charging case.

    When both Powerbeats Pro 2 earbuds are placed in the ears, and heart rate monitoring is active, Apple says LED optical sensors pulse at over 100 times per second to measure heart rate via blood flow. The feature integrates with popular fitness apps to collect data during workouts and sync it to Apple’s Health app on the iPhone.

    The feature is based on the Apple Watch’s heart rate sensing technology. If someone is wearing both Powerbeats Pro 2 and an Apple Watch, Apple says apps default to using Apple Watch heart rate data, and that will likely apply to the AirPods Pro 3 too.

    Beyond heart rate monitoring, it is likely that the next AirPods Pro will feature improved sound quality, increased active noise cancellation, design changes, and more.

    AirPods Pro 2 debuted at the iPhone 14 event in September 2022, and they were updated with a USB-C charging case and a few other tweaks in September 2023.

    While there will have been at least a three-year gap between the launches of the AirPods Pro 2 and the AirPods Pro 3, the wait for AirPods Pro 4 might be significantly shorter. Kuo said that Apple plans to update the AirPods Pro again next year, with a “more significant” hardware upgrade: at least one tiny infrared camera.

    Kuo previously said AirPods with infrared cameras could recognize hand gestures, and provide an enhanced spatial audio experience with Apple’s Vision Pro headset.

    “For example, when a user is watching a video with Vision Pro and wearing this new AirPods, if users turn their heads to look in a specific direction, the sound source in that direction can be emphasized to enhance the spatial audio/computing experience,” he said.

    AirPods Pro 4 next year sounds quite ambitious, though, so we will see if that actually happens.

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  • Thousands pay their last respects to Giorgio Armani, private funeral on Monday

    Thousands pay their last respects to Giorgio Armani, private funeral on Monday

    By&nbspEuronews

    Published on

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    More than 15 thousand people arrived from all over Italy in Milan to pay their last respects to Giorgio Armani during the weekend.

    The funeral chamber for the designer who died at the age of 91 on Thursday was set up at the Armani Theatre, the venue for the Prêt-à-porter shows of the fashion house founded fifty years ago.

    On Saturday, more than six thousand people entered the theatre set up with candles and white roses, including the mayor of Milan and fashion designer Donatella Versace. On Sunday, the queue to enter the chamber began at seven in the morning.

    Also arriving for Armani’s final farewell were fashion designers Luisa Lusardi of Max Mara, Santo Versace, Dean and Dan Caten of Dsquared2 and the president of Lombardy, Attilio Fontana, who described the designer as ‘a Lombard excellence, a genius and a great entrepreneur’. And then the Minister of University and Research, Anna Maria Bernini and the entrepreneur and Napoli owner Aurelio De Laurentiis. With the EA7 brand, Armani signed the football team’s uniforms. Together with the ordinary people, many show business and sports personalities, such as Isabella Ferrari, Afef Jnifen, Cristina Parodi, Federica Pellegrini and Marco Tardelli.

    Arriving from all over Italy for the last farewell to Armani

    “He always stood out for his elegance, his style and, above all, his simplicity, the sobriety with which he faced every event, with the utmost respect for all those who worked for him, and I think he should be an example for us, for all of us, for Italy, for the future. We should always remember him for his incredible ability to be great in his simplicity,” said Milan resident Christian Moncada

    For Alfonso Di Gennaro, who arrived from Turin, Armani ‘is a great man’. “We have been his customers all our lives. I came especially from Turin to say goodbye to him. I also had the satisfaction of meeting him in person. I had him sign my wife’s arm, then I had it tattooed. What could be better? So it’s only right to come here and say goodbye to him. He really deserves it. He really deserves it.”

    Funeral in Rivalta di Gazzola

    The funeral will be held on Monday afternoon in a private ceremony in the village of Rivalta di Gazzola, in the province of Piacenza, and he will be buried in the family chapel where his mother Maria, father Ugo, and brother Sergio are already buried.

    The village will be completely armoured for the occasion. According to the Ansa agency, Armani was often in Rivalta to visit the family tomb, but also to eat ‘tortelli con la coda’ at the Locanda del Falco.

    Milan will greet ‘King Giorgio’ again on 28 September on the occasion of the fashion show celebrating the fashion house’s 50th anniversary. The event is scheduled to take place at Palazzo Brera.

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  • AFG vs PAK Highlights, Tri-Series 2025 Final: Pakistan beats Afghanistan by 75 runs to win tournament

    AFG vs PAK Highlights, Tri-Series 2025 Final: Pakistan beats Afghanistan by 75 runs to win tournament

    Welcome to Sportstar’s Highlights of the Tri-Series in UAE 2025 final between Afghanistan and Pakistan at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium on Sunday.

    HIGHLIGHTS

    PLAYING XIs

    Afghanistan: Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), Ibrahim Zadran, Sediqullah Atal, Darwish Rasooli, Karim Janat, Azmatullah Omarzai, Rashid Khan (c), Mohammad Nabi, AM Ghazanfar, Noor Ahmad, Fazalhaq Farooqi

    Pakistan: Sahibzada Farhan, Saim Ayub, Fakhar Zaman, Salman Ali Agha (c), Hasan Nawaz, Mohammad Haris (wk), Faheem Ashraf, Shaheen Afridi, Sufiyan Muqeem, Abrar Ahmed, Muhammad Nawaz

    SQUADS

    Afghanistan: Rashid Khan (c), Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Ibrahim Zadran, Darwish Rasooli, Sediqullah Atal, Azmatullah Omarzai, Karim Janat, Mohammad Nabi, Gulbadin Naib, Sharafuddin Ashraf, Mohammad Ishaq, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Allah Ghazanfar, Noor Ahmad, Farid Malik, Abdullah Ahmadzai, Fazalhaq Farooqi.

    Pakistan: Fakhar Zaman, Hasan Nawaz, Mohammad Haris (wk), Sahibzada Farhan, Saim Ayub, Salman Agha (c), Faheem Ashraf, Hussain Talat, Khushdil Shah, Mohammad Nawaz, Abrar Ahmed, Haris Rauf, Hasan Ali, Mohammad Wasim, Salman Mirza, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Sufiyan Muqeem.

    LIVE STREAMING INFO

    When will the Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan take place?

    The Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan will be played on Sunday, September 7.

    Where will the Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan be held?

    The Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan will take place at Sharjah Cricket Stadium, UAE.

    At what time will the Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan start?

    The Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan will begin at 8:30 PM IST. The toss will take place at 8 PM IST.

    Where to watch the live telecast of the Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan in India?

    The Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan will be televised live in India on the Eurosport channel.

    Where to watch the live stream of the Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan in India?

    The Tri-Series Final between Afghanistan and Pakistan will be streamed live on the FanCode app and website in India.

    Published on Sep 07, 2025

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