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PlayStation 6 performance estimates: double PS5 Pro, RTX 4090 or faster performance – TweakTown
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Pakistan vows political, diplomatic support for Kashmiris on Kashmir Martyrs’ Day
ISLAMABAD: The chief minister of Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province this week launched the country’s first-ever riot management police force, state-run media reported, saying the move would prove instrumental in protecting people’s lives and ensure the safety of government infrastructure.
As per a report in the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), a comprehensive eight-week training program was held at the Police Training Center in Punjab’s Farooqabad city for the first batch of the force.
The training followed manuals from the United States, Turkiye, Europe and other developed countries, and was delivered by experts trained in Turkiye, the report said. During the passing-out ceremony, officers demonstrated exceptional crowd-control drills designed to safely manage violent protest scenarios.
“Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif has established Pakistan’s first-ever dedicated Riot Management Police Force, marking a major milestone in law enforcement and crowd control in the province,” the APP report said on Saturday.
“The new force has been created within the Punjab Police framework to protect the life, property, and safety of citizens as well as government infrastructure.”
The report said that the Riot Management Police, which consists of physically active, capable, and agile officers, was trained specifically to respond to volatile situations with professionalism.
It said the first phase of the Riot Management Police Force includes 5,000 personnel, out of which 3,000 have successfully completed training. The report said these personnel will be deployed across Punjab’s regional headquarters, with 250 officers assigned to each region to ensure “swift and organized response” to unrest.
Each Riot Management Police team of 250 personnel is supported by 15 specialized sub-units, including the First Aid Unit, the Drone Surveillance Team, the Crowd Engagement Team, the Negotiation Team, the Crowd Control Unit, the Arrest Unit, the Evacuation Team, the K9 (dog handler) Unit, the Sniper and Tactical Response Team.
“The force has been equipped with advanced crowd-control equipment, safety gear, and riot protection tools, and personnel will receive special allowances based on their professional roles,” APP said.
Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz was briefed that the force has been specially trained to manage all types of crowds, including organized violent groups. The aim is to not only neutralize threats but also engage with protesters proactively to prevent damage to public and private property, she said.
“The establishment of this force brings a new dimension to modern governance,” Nawaz was quoted as saying. “By safely controlling angry crowds, it becomes possible to de-escalate tension and prevent chaos.”
Pakistan has historically seen violent protests that have caused significant damage to people’s lives, property and government infrastructure.Continue Reading
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Flood alert issued as new monsoon spell hits Pakistan – Samaa TV
- Flood alert issued as new monsoon spell hits Pakistan Samaa TV
- NDMA issues high alert for flash flood risks across Punjab, KP, and Balochistan Ptv.com.pk
- Flood alerts issued across country The Express Tribune
- NDMA expects moderate to heavy monsoon rains in multiple parts of country Dawn
- NEOC warns of landslides in northern regions particularly Gilgit-Baltistan, AJ&K Business Recorder
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NBA 2K26 Summer League: Second-year guards fuel Wolves’ win over Nuggets
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• Summer League: Complete Coverage• Wolves 94, Nuggets 83: Box Score | Game Detail
LAS VEGAS — A game-high 24 points from 2024 first-round pick Terrence Shannon Jr. and a strong showing from their second unit led the Minnesota Timberwolves to a 94-83 win over the Denver Nuggets in a NBA2K26 Summer League battle at Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas on Saturday night.
A game that would culminate in a fairly comfortable Timberwolves victory was competitive in the first quarter, which Minnesota emerged from with a 25-20 lead. The Wolves would add another nine points to their advantage before halftime. Although the Nuggets managed to make a five-point dent in the deficit in the third, Minnesota’s 12-6 run over the first 4:35 of the final period essentially sealed the victory. Denver’s bench was outscored by a 36-29 margin, and the Timberwolves also held a 15-3 edge in fast-break points.
Shannon added seven rebounds, three assists and one steal to his scoring tally. Rob Dillingham furnished 15 points, nine assists, four rebounds and three steals. Tristen Newton contributed 12 points, three assists and one rebound, while 17th overall pick Joan Beringer supplied seven points, seven rebounds, three assists and one block.
Spencer Jones paced the Nuggets with 19 points, supplementing them with six rebounds and two steals. Hunter Tyson and Tamar Bates generated matching 13-point efforts, with Tyson also pulling down seven boards. Tyrell Harrison and Curtis Jones recorded 10 points and five rebounds apiece while adding two blocks and three assists, respectively.
Both teams return to the floor Tuesday. The Timberwolves will face off with the Detroit Pistons in the first game of the day, while the Nuggets tangle with the Toronto Raptors later that night.
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Conway, Hay, Neesham and Robinson called into T20 squad for Zimbabwe Tri-Series
Devon Conway, Mitch Hay, Jimmy Neesham and Tim Robinson will join the BLACKCAPS T20I squad in Harare for the upcoming Tri-Series against Zimbabwe and South Africa.
Wicketkeeper-batter Conway will replace Finn Allen for the full T20I series, after Allen was ruled out with a foot injury earlier this week.
Hay, Neesham and Robinson will join the squad as additional cover for Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Glenn Phillips and Rachin Ravindra who are involved in the Major League Cricket tournament final on Monday.
BLACKCAPS head coach Rob Walter said he was feeling for Allen.
“We’re really gutted for Finn,” said Walter.
“I was looking forward to working with him and to see him continue his form from the MLC but unfortunately injuries happen.
“We’re lucky to be able to call on someone of Devon’s quality to replace Finn.”
Walter said he was prepared to expand the squad.
“We knew there’d be a possibility that a handful of players could be involved in the MLC final on Monday, so we’re bringing in Mitch, Jimmy and Tim as possible replacements.”
The BLACKCAPS play South Africa in their first Tri-Series match on Wednesday at 11pm NZT.
Stream the full T20I Tri-Series live and free in New Zealand on ThreeNow, with live scoring at nzc.nz and the NZC App.
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Conway, Hay, Neesham and Robinson called into T20 squad for Zimbabwe Tri-Series
Devon Conway, Mitch Hay, Jimmy Neesham and Tim Robinson will join the BLACKCAPS T20I squad in Harare for the upcoming Tri-Series against Zimbabwe and South Africa.
Wicketkeeper-batter Conway will replace Finn Allen for the full T20I series, after Allen was ruled out with a foot injury earlier this week.
Hay, Neesham and Robinson will join the squad as additional cover for Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Glenn Phillips and Rachin Ravindra who are involved in the Major League Cricket tournament final on Monday.
BLACKCAPS head coach Rob Walter said he was feeling for Allen.
“We’re really gutted for Finn,” said Walter.
“I was looking forward to working with him and to see him continue his form from the MLC but unfortunately injuries happen.
“We’re lucky to be able to call on someone of Devon’s quality to replace Finn.”
Walter said he was prepared to expand the squad.
“We knew there’d be a possibility that a handful of players could be involved in the MLC final on Monday, so we’re bringing in Mitch, Jimmy and Tim as possible replacements.”
The BLACKCAPS play South Africa in their first Tri-Series match on Wednesday at 11pm NZT.
Stream the full T20I Tri-Series live and free in New Zealand on ThreeNow, with live scoring at nzc.nz and the NZC App.
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James Gunn’s ‘Superman’ Box Office Revealed
Superman hit the big screen on July 11 with all the power of a Kryptonian smashing through a Metropolis high-rise.
The film is a reboot from director James Gunn, who directed the Guardians of the Galaxy series.
The film stars David Corenswet as Superman and Rachel Brosnahan as the iconic Lois Lane.
The synopsis of the film, according to IMDb, is, “Superman must reconcile his alien Kryptonian heritage with his human upbringing as reporter Clark Kent. As the embodiment of truth, justice, and the human way, he soon finds himself in a world that views these as old-fashioned.”
Superman is quickly rising to the top of the box office, according to reports from CNN. The Warner Bros. Pictures’ film grossed an estimated $56.5 million domestically on its opening day, July 11. That’s on top of $22.5 million it earned the day before from Thursday previews.
Variety reports that Superman was shown in 4,135 theaters across the U.S. Its earnings make it the second-biggest hit for the calendar year so far, just behind A Minecraft Movie, which earned $57.11 million.
So far, Superman is ahead of Lilo and Stitch, which earned $55.94 million.
DAVID CORENSWET as Superman in DC Studios’ and Warner Bros. Pictures’ “SUPERMAN,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release.Jessica Miglio/Warner Bros./DC
According to Deadline, Superman was a success at international box offices as well. So far, the film has grossed $40 million from offshore sources.
Superman has also garnered great reviews from critics and the general public. Its Rotten Tomatoes critic score sits at 82% and it has an outstanding audience score of 93%.
A critical review from Glen Weldon stated on Rotten Tomatoes, “It makes you want to cheer. That’s it, that’s the secret ingredient that’s been missing from so many superhero movies for so long.”
Audience reviews on Rotten Tomatoes included praise such as “James Gunn knocked it out of the park! Superman had a little bit of everything. Felt much more like the comics again!”
Related: Tom Holland Announces Exciting Update On Next Spider-Man Movie
James Gunn’s ‘Superman’ Box Office Revealed first appeared on Men’s Journal on Jul 13, 2025
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New research links toxic metals and stunting in infants
Researchers found higher breast milk concentrations of arsenic, barium, beryllium and lead cause impaired growth of infants in Guatemalan communities
Representational Image | Photo: Canva
New Delhi: High levels of toxic metals like lead and arsenic in breast milk may impair growth in infants, according to an alarming study.
Breast milk is the best source of nutrition for infants under six months of age. However, it can also be a potential route of exposure to toxic metals and other contaminants that may impair neurological development and immune function, said the researchers from the University of Arizona in the US.
Arsenic and lead found in lactating mothers in Guatemala
The team focussed on Mayan women in Guatemala’s Lake Atitlán watershed region, and found concentrations of arsenic and lead that exceeded World Health Organization safety standards in breast milk in mothers.
Sandra Rodríguez Quintana, a postdoctoral research associate at the University said, “Detecting toxic metals in breast milk is deeply concerning and highlights the potential role of environmental pollution in undermining child development.”
Quintana added that their work calls for interventions to protect maternal and child health and understanding how environmental concentrations of metals may contribute to stunting and other health issues.
Stunting due to poor nutrition and infections from drinking water
Guatemala has the highest rate of impaired growth, or stunting, in the Western Hemisphere. Stunting is frequently attributed to poor nutrition and infections.
Many studies have linked high levels of metals in drinking water to developmental, neurological, and learning problems in young children, but this is the first study to demonstrate an association with stunting in the Americas.
The research team studied 80 mothers and their infants from four different Lake Atitlán communities, and the results were published in the journal Environmental Pollution.
The scientists analysed breast milk samples from the mothers and measured the infants’ lengths.
They found that higher breast milk concentrations of arsenic, barium, beryllium and lead were associated with impaired growth of infants in these communities.
The researchers also found higher concentrations of arsenic and barium in drinking water, which was identified as the major reason for toxic elements in breast milk.
“Drinking water contaminated with toxic elements such as arsenic and pathogenic microbes imposes a serious burden on public health, especially for the developing child,” the team said.
IANS
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135,971 girls to be administered HPV vaccine
ATTOCK – As many as 135,971 girls aged between 9 to 14 years will be administered HPV vaccine to safeguard them from Cervical Cancer. For the purpose, a special campaign will be conducted from 15th till 27th September. ADCG Attock Anil Saeed said this while presiding over a meeting in this context.
The meeting was attended by all the relevant officers. The participants of the meeting were informed that 106 teams have been constituted and these teams will be deputed in all the 75 union councils of the Attock district.
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PSG and Chelsea in the Club World Cup final reflects the state of the game in 2025
There was a temporary exhibit in the lobby of Trump Tower this week, near the 60-foot waterfall, the gold-plated escalator and the gold-plated elevators, and it looked right at home.
FIFA’s new Club World Cup trophy was crafted in collaboration with luxury jeweller Tiffany & Co, which is based on the same block on New York City’s Fifth Avenue. It is plated in 24-carat gold — “prestigious, timeless,” says FIFA president Gianni Infantino, whose name appears on it. Twice.
It is certainly eye-catching. Like some expensive toy, it comes with a key that, if turned three times, allows the trophy to be opened up and transformed — in this case from a shield into what FIFA calls a “multifaceted and orbital structure”. “Wow,” President Trump said when Infantino gave a demonstration in front of television cameras in the Oval Office in April. “You’ve gotta be kidding.”
Trump is expected to join Infantino as part of the presentation party that will hand the trophy to the winning captain — either Paris Saint-Germain’s Marquinhos or Chelsea’s Reece James — after Sunday’s Club World Cup final at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey (or “New York New Jersey” as FIFA appears intent on rebranding it).
Quite what the captain does with the trophy at that point — whether he lifts it, or opens it, or opens it and then tries to lift it in its expanded form — remains to be seen. But Infantino will have the moment he craves: fireworks, blaring music and Trump in attendance as the new world champions celebrate with the trophy and the winning club’s owners celebrate a windfall in the region of $114million (£84.5million).
The Club World Cup trophy on display at Trump Tower this week (Juan Mabromata/AFP via Getty Images)This summer’s Club World Cup has been a strange experience. There has been a lot to take issue with, from the way it was crowbarred into a small gap in a horribly congested calendar to the commercially driven insistence on playing matches in scorching heat at the height of an American summer. The prize fund is only going to compound the issue of financial inequality in the game and then there’s the endless bombast from Infantino about how “the 32 best teams in the world” and their fans have created drama and atmosphere on an “epic”, “phenomenal”, “incredible” scale, beyond anything previously seen in club football.
“If you want the headline from the beginning — as we are in Trump Tower — the golden era of global club football has started,” Infantino declared on Saturday morning. “We can say definitely that this FIFA Club World Cup has been a huge, huge, huge success. After the final tomorrow, we will have (had) two or three billion viewers all over the world, watching the top, top, top-quality football featuring the best players in the best teams in the world.”
The tournament has had its moments, but is this the showpiece final Infantino would have wished for the first version of the expanded tournament? Probably not; even if he were to look beyond his lifelong affinity with Inter, he might have preferred to see a final involving Real Madrid and/or one of the South American teams. The first would have been for commercial reasons, the second because it would have brought a global dimension, as well as a colour and vibrancy, that an all-European final lacks.
In many ways, though, a final between PSG and Chelsea seems to encapsulate the state of the game in 2025: a club owned by a Qatari sovereign wealth fund facing a club owned primarily by an American private equity firm. They are two of the three clubs with the biggest net transfer spend in world football over the past decade. (The fact that the other club in that trio is Manchester United, owned by an American family with a real estate empire, at least serves as a reminder that spending fortunes does not always guarantee success.)
Money makes the world go around — and no more so than in football. The sport did not anticipate the influx of American and Middle Eastern wealth it has seen over the past couple of decades, but it now actively lusts after that investment, whether direct or otherwise. FIFA, football’s world governing body, is at the centre of that equation.
This is a tournament on American soil, bankrolled by American and Middle Eastern investment. When, shortly after succeeding Sepp Blatter as FIFA president in 2016, Infantino floated the idea of an expanded Club World Cup with a $1billion prize fund for participating clubs, questions were asked about where that money was going to come from. The answer, to a large extent, is from the United States and the Middle East: big commercial deals with U.S. firms such as Coca Cola, Visa and Bank of America as well as with Qatar Airways and PIF (a Saudi Arabian sovereign wealth fund) and an enormous television rights deal with DAZN, a U.S-based broadcaster that is now part-owned by SURJ Sports Investment, a subsidiary of PIF.
Infantino has been unapologetic for chasing Middle Eastern investment. In May, he arrived late at the FIFA Congress in Asuncion, Paraguay — to the disdain of delegates from UEFA, European football’s governing body — after spending the previous days at various summits and ceremonial events with Trump in Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
At the Saudi-U.S. Investment Forum in Riyadh, the FIFA president spoke about the “huge unexploited potential” — even now — for investment from both countries, telling his audience: “Invest in the beautiful game! It will be the best investment you can make!”
Infantino claims interest in the Club World Cup has been off the scale. But it seems irrelevant to question whether a Qatari airline or a Saudi sovereign wealth fund has extracted value from sponsorship deals if those deals are less about “value” in the traditional sense than about cementing that nation’s government’s relationship with FIFA and enjoying whatever benefits might come of that.
Infantino eulogised about the success of the Club World Cup on Saturday (Sven Hoppe/picture alliance via Getty Images)Next summer, the U.S. will co-host the men’s World Cup with Canada and Mexico. Three-quarters of the games (78 out of 104) will take place in American cities and the whole affair seems to be shaping into a Trump-Infantino production. Trump has delighted his “good friend” and FIFA counterpart by becoming the chair of the 2026 World Cup task force — and this at a time when Trump signed executive orders restricting entry to the U.S. for nationals of various countries while imposing heavy trade tariffs on others, including their tournament co-hosts, Mexico.
Trump told reporters in March that political or economic tensions between the U.S. and its neighbours and co-hosts might make the World Cup “much more exciting”. Infantino, alongside him, nodded in agreement.
Infantino in the Oval Office, with a group from Juventus, during the tournament (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)As for Saudi Arabia, it will host the 2034 men’s World Cup — despite the concerns raised by various groups about the kingdom’s human rights record — and its influence on FIFA and the football industry continues to grow. Infantino’s predecessor, Sepp Blatter, told German TV channel ntv this week: “We have lost football to Saudi Arabia. We offered it and they took it. Surprisingly, there is no opposition to this within FIFA.”
Football revolves around the prestige and profile of the biggest clubs in Europe, which import talent from all over the world but primarily from South America and Africa. But the football economy, increasingly, revolves around the U.S. and the Middle East.
Where any of this is leading is anyone’s guess. But in a decade that has already seen 12 of Europe’s biggest clubs try and fail to establish a breakaway ‘super league’, it is easy to imagine a scenario in which the game’s established structure comes under serious threat once more.
The scene in the VIP section at Wednesday’s semi-final at MetLife (below) — Infantino, Real Madrid president Florentino Perez, PSG chairman Nasser Al-Khelaifi and Turki Al-Sheikh, the chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority — left you wondering just how four of the most influential figures in football in 2025 might proceed if, hypothetically, they felt they had the opportunity to change the game’s landscape to their design.
(Alex Grimm/Getty Images)It is hard not to imagine that Infantino’s vision for the future goes much further than a 32-team tournament every four years when he has been talking about this tournament as a “big bang” and a “new era of club football”. At Saturday’s chaotic media event at Trump Tower, The Athletic asked the FIFA president if he might push for it to be played every two years. “In the future, we will see what it brings us. We will make it better,” he said, a vague answer that will cause consternation among traditionalists.
Infantino sounds like someone who is looking far beyond the game’s traditional structures and architecture, in which everything is built around national leagues. The football business has changed hugely — and some of us would say not for the better — over the first quarter of the 21st century. It threatens to change far more dramatically over the next 25 years.
He claimed the Club World Cup has broken all records when it comes to the revenue generated per match, saying that “no other club competition in the world today comes anywhere close”. Those enormous commercial deals have certainly helped at a time when the organisers have found themselves putting the “dynamic” into “dynamic pricing” by slashing ticket prices in a bid to minimise the number of empty seats in the knock-out rounds.
Whether the tournament has captured the imagination of the typical football fan — or, to generalise less, of the typical cross-section of football fans — is a different matter entirely. A Champions League or Copa Libertadores semi-final and final is an enormous event that stops people in their tracks and dominates conversations; a World Cup final even more so. Was the football world captivated when PSG tore Real Madrid apart on Wednesday? It didn’t feel like it. Will it be any different when PSG take on Chelsea on Sunday? It is hard to imagine so.
The Club World Cup has its showpiece event, one that promises to be illuminated by a PSG team that has taken its game to another level since the turn of the year, excelling under the stewardship of Luis Enrique. But whether Sunday’s final will represent a showpiece for the game, or merely for FIFA’s success in milking it, is another question.
In the post-match festivities, that key will be turned three times to unlock the trophy. Infantino might say it is symbolic of club football’s true potential being unlocked as part of this new “golden era” he has been talking about. But… oh, what’s that old saying? All that glitters is not gold.
(Top photo: Cole Palmer and Ousmane Dembele at Rockefeller Center. Darren Walsh/Chelsea FC via Getty Images)
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