- Justice Mansoor urges AI, latest software use to fight climate change Samaa TV
- No preparedness Dawn
- Anthropogenic and climatic drivers of the 2022 mega-flood in Pakistan Nature
- Pakistan: Neglect, mismanagement leave Sindh drowning in climate chaos Tribune India
- Same rain, same ruin: KP’s monsoon myopia The Express Tribune
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Justice Mansoor urges AI, latest software use to fight climate change – Samaa TV
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WP, Sharks bank big wins at FNB U18 Craven Week
The second day of the tournament served up a series of engaging contests, with 39 tries scored over the course of the four matches – and 14 of those coming in the Western Cape derby.
Valke wing Dihan Crause scored a brace in the first fixture of the day, as the East Randers fought back from an early deficit to go to half-time with a 19-12 lead. The Leopards had the final say, though, with No 8 Tiaan Koen crashing over the tryline in the 69th minute to secure a valuable 29-29 draw for his side.
The game between Border and Suzuki Griquas was in the balance, before the boys from the Eastern Cape raced clear after the break. Griquas’ discipline cost them in the second stanza, and Border took full advantage, scoring six tries in all.
Eastern Province went toe to toe with the Sharks in a fiercely contested first half, but struggled to live with the KwaZulu-Natalians in the latter stages of the game.
Sharks fullback Zekhethelo Siyaya – who represented SA Schools in 2024 – scored a long-range try after half-time, and finished with a tally of 10 points, while replacement back Nathan Aneke grabbed a brace to boost his side to an emphatic 41-10 win.
In the final match of the day, WP – who finished last year’s tournament unbeaten – got their campaign off to an explosive start when they thrashed Boland 80-18 in the Western Cape derby.
No 8 Quintin Potgieter scored a hat-trick for Province, while flyhalf Ethan van Biljon contributed 15 points to the cause.
The FNB U18 Craven Week will continue at Hoërskool Middelburg on Wednesday, with the Limpopo Blue Bulls taking on the Griffons in the first fixture. The Obaro Golden Lions and South Western Districts, who claimed impressive wins against the Blue Bulls and Free State respectively on day one, will meet in the final clash of the day.
FNB U18 Craven Week day two results (Tuesday, 8 July):
Leopards 29 (12) v Valke 29 (19)
Border 36 (17) v Suzuki Griquas 17 (10)
Sharks High Schools 41 (13) Eastern Province 10 (3)
DHL Western Province 80 (40) Sanlam Boland 18 (6)FNB U18 Craven Week day three fixtures results (Wednesday, 9 July):
10h00: Limpopo Blue Bulls v Griffons
11h30: DHL Western Province XV v Hollywood Foundation Pumas
13h00: Free State v Blue Bulls
14h30: Obaro Golden Lions v SWDThe Leopards and Valke drew in the opening game on day two.
Border were too strong for Griquas.
The Sharks ran riot against EP.
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Imran Khan sends message through sister Aleema
Pakistan
PTI founder’s sons ‘to highlight human rights issues in Pakistan from the US’
RAWALPINDI (Dunya News) – Aleema Khan, sister of PTI founder Imran Khan, has revealed that Imran has urged all party members to focus entirely on the movement for freedom and the rule of law.
She added that his sons, Suleman and Qasim, also wish to take part in the campaign.
In an interaction with the media outside Adiala Jail, Aleema Khan said: “The [PTI] founder has made it clear – the time has come for all Pakistanis to stand up for their freedom and for justice. He said everyone must rise against oppression, and we will also step out and join the movement.”
She added that Imran Khan believes those who cannot shoulder the responsibility of the movement should step down from their positions.
“There was no talk of negotiations. Right now, it’s all about standing firm and sticking together,” Aleema clarified.
According to her, plans are being made for the return of Imran Khan’s sons, Suleman and Qasim, to Pakistan. “They will also raise their voices for human rights violations in Pakistan while in the US,” she added.
Read also: No one in Pakistan’s history has endured imprisonment like Imran, says Aleema Khan
Aleema Khan expressed frustration over distractions that emerge whenever a movement gains momentum.
“Every time a movement kicks off, people start talking nonsense. But the founder has given the green signal – the movement must move forward,” she said.
She further stated that Imran Khan has said all other doors are now closed, and the only way forward is the movement.
“The leadership of PTI will lead the campaign, and it is up to them to announce the date,” she concluded.
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Imran Khan wants anti-govt protest to ‘hit peak’ on August 5
Imran Khan is pictured at a lawyers’ convention in Lahore, on September 21, 2022. — AFP - Aleema Khan claims PTI founder to lead the protest from jail.
- Claims 26 PTI Punjab MPAs suspended to “Maryam Nawaz”.
- Khan not allowed to see personal physician for 10 months: Noreen.
Incarcerated Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) founder Imran Khan wants his party’s anti-government protest to “hit peak” on August 5 — the day when he completes two years in jail — his sister Aleema Khan said on Tuesday.
The jailed PTI patron-in-chief had directed that the party should begin its movement against the government after the 10th of Muharram, Aleema quoted his orders last week.
“Muharram 10 has passed […] the party will unveil its strategy now,” said Aleema while talking to journalists at Gorakhpur check post after she along with Noreen Niazi and Uzma Khan met the ex-premier at Rawalpindi’s Adiala jail.
The PTI founder would lead the protest from jail, she claimed, and launched a criticism against the party leadership, quoting Khan as saying that he was free in prison while they are imprisoned outside.
“Our family knows about the protest plan,” said Aleema, however, she remained tight-lipped about the details of the upcoming demonstration. She added that they would inform the media regarding the plan at an appropriate time.
The protest route — whether it starts from Peshawar and proceeds to Lahore — will be decided and disclosed by the party, she added.
She also said that Khan’s entire family would participate in the upcoming protest. Khan had conveyed that those unable to carry the burden of the political movement should step aside, she added.
Reacting to the suspension of 26 PTI lawmakers in the Punjab Assembly, Aleema alleged that the suspension was made to “appease [Punjab Chief Minister] Maryam Nawaz.”
Khan’s another sister, Noreen Niazi, told reporters that he was in good health, but the jail authorities denied access of television, newspapers and reading material to the former premier for the past one week.
Aleema alleged that the PTI founder and his wife Bushra were kept in solitary confinement, adding that Khan has not been allowed to see his personal physician for 10 months.
She also blamed the Punjab chief minister for her involvement in imposing restrictive measures on ex-premier Khan in jail.
CM Gandapur to lead protest
Last week, PTI spokesperson Sheikh Waqas Akram said his party first postponed the nationwide protests due to the Iran-Israel war, then it delayed it out of respect for Muharram days.
In the first phase, demonstrations would be held in provinces and districts, the PTI spokesperson said.
To a query, he said the party workers should not be exposed to live bullets. “When the first bullet was fired, the PTI founder won,” he said.
To another query pertaining to KP CM Ali Amin Gandapur’s statement that he would carry weapons to the protest, Akram said Gandapur was talking about self-defence. “What the chief minister meant was that everybody has the right to self-defence,” he added.
The PTI spokesperson also said the PTI founder had directed Gandapur to lead the protest.
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Palace issues update after King Charles sparks health concern with blood in eye
Buckingham Palace has released an update regarding King Charles’s health after he sparked serious concern with blood in eye during a grand reception for French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday.
The 76-year-old monarch left fans worried as he suffered from a visibly bloodshot right eye, sparking health fear during a grand reception for the couple.
Amid speculation about the King’s health, a spokesperson confirmed the bloodshot appearance was due to a burst blood vessel that developed overnight.
However, they quashed rumours and speculations about the King’s health, adding that it was unrelated to his ongoing cancer treatment and there was no cause for alarm.
The monarch appeared alongside Queen Camilla and First Lady Brigitte Macron to mark the beginning of the three-day diplomatic trip. The visit will focus on celebrating 1,000 years of “shared history and culture” between Britain and France.
The visit marks a significant diplomatic engagement between the two nations, with both heads of state and their spouses participating in the Windsor welcome ceremony.
Following the ceremonial welcome, The King and Queen escorted the French President and his wife into Windsor Castle.
A formal lunch in the State Dining Room will follow, attended by various members of the Royal Family, before the royals show their guests a specially curated exhibition of French-related items from the Royal Collection in the Green Drawing Room.
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Qatar dashes hopes of rapid Gaza ceasefire, saying talks ‘will need time’ | Gaza
Progress towards a ceasefire in Gaza has been slow, officials in Qatar say, dashing hopes of a rapid end to hostilities in the devastated Palestinian territory.
The new round of indirect talks between Israel and Hamas began on Sunday, after both sides accepted a broad US-sponsored outline of a deal for an initial 60-day ceasefire that could lead to a permanent end to the 21-month conflict.
“I don’t think that I can give any timeline at the moment, but I can say right now that we will need time for this,” Majed al-Ansari, Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesperson, said on Tuesday, the third day of negotiations in Doha.
A Palestinian official familiar with the talks said “no breakthrough has been achieved so far”.
The admission that immediate agreement is unlikely may mean Donald Trump will not be able to announce a deal during this week’s visit to Washington by Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, as Trump appeared to have hoped.
On Monday, Trump expressed confidence a deal could be reached soon, telling reporters “things are going along very well” and that Hamas “want to have that ceasefire”.
However, Ansari suggested the negotiations were still in relatively early stages. “What is happening right now is that both delegations are in Doha. We are speaking with them separately on a framework for the talks. So talks have not begun, as of yet, but we are talking to both sides over that framework,” he said.
In Gaza, the death toll continues to mount. Five Israeli military personnel were killed and 14 injured late on Monday in an attack by Hamas militants near Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said, while Gaza’s civil defence agency reported 29 people killed in Israeli strikes across the territory, including three children.
Mahmoud Bassal, a spokesperson for the agency, said nine people had been killed in a drone strike on a camp for displaced people in southern Gaza.
Shaimaa al-Shaer, 30, who lives in the camp, said: “I was in front of my tent preparing breakfast for my four children – beans and a bit of dry bread. Suddenly, there was an explosion.”
Relatives of the Abu al-Khair family mourn their children at Nasser hospital, after they were killed by an Israeli drone that struck their tent. Photograph: Anas Deeb/UPI/Shutterstock Health officials at the Nasser hospital, where victims of the Israeli strikes were taken, said one of the strikes had targeted tents sheltering displaced people in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, killing four. A separate strike in the city killed another four people – a mother, father, and their two children, officials said.
In central Gaza, Israeli strikes hit a group of people, killing 10 and injuring 72, according to a statement by Awda hospital in Nuseirat.
The IDF accuses Hamas of using civilians as human shields, which Hamas denies.
Evacuation orders were issued by the IDF for more neighbourhoods of Khan Younis, displacing thousands of people before new Israeli attacks there.
The current ceasefire proposal envisages a phased release of 28 hostages, Israeli troop withdrawals from parts of Gaza the IDF has seized in recent months, an increase in humanitarian aid to the territory, and discussions on ending the war.
Hamas also want guarantees that Israel will not launch a new offensive after the 60-day truce. A previous ceasefire collapsed in March when Israel reneged on a promise to engage in negotiations that would have led to a second scheduled phase of the existing truce, and possibly a permanent cessation of hostilities.
Israel has said it will not agree to stop fighting until Hamas has released all the 50 hostages it still holds, of whom more than half are dead, and disarms.
Palestinian sources said earlier this week there were also gaps between the parties on the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza and its distribution.
In contrast to Palestinian and Qatari officials, senior Israeli officials have highlighted progress in the talks.
Ze’ev Elkin, a member of Israel’s security cabinet, said there was “a substantial chance” a ceasefire would be agreed. “Hamas wants to change a few central matters; it’s not simple, but there is progress,” he told Israel’s public broadcaster Kan.
On Monday, Israel Katz, Israel’s defence minister, laid out plans to force all Palestinians in Gaza into a camp on the ruins of Rafah, a scheme legal experts and academics described as a blueprint for crimes against humanity.
Katz said he had ordered the IDF to prepare to set up a camp, which he called a “humanitarian city”, in Rafah. Israeli forces would control the perimeter of the site and initially “move” 600,000 Palestinians into the area – mostly people currently displaced in the Mawasi area.
Eventually, the entire population of Gaza would be housed there, and Israel aimed to implement “the emigration plan, which will happen”, Haaretz newspaper quoted Katz saying.
Gaza’s ministry of health has counted more than 57,000 killed by the Israeli offensive, mostly civilians. The UN and several western governments consider the tally to be reliable.
The offensive has plunged Gaza’s population into an acute humanitarian crisis, with many threatened by famine, and reduced much of the territory to rubble.
The war was triggered by a Hamas-led attack on southern Israeli in October 2023 in which militants killed 1,200, mostly civilians, and abducted 250.
AFP and Reuters contributed reporting
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Pomp, pageantry, politesse greet Macron in display of British royals’ soft power
LONDON — The French Tricolor and Britain’s Union flag hang from the standards near Windsor Castle. The carriages are primed, the tiaras polished.
French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte, arrived in Britain on Tuesday at the start of a state visit as the two countries highlight their long friendship with conspicuous displays of military pomp, golden carriages and royal toasts.
The backdrop for day one is Windsor Castle, a royal fortress for over 900 years that remains a working palace today.
Prince William and the Princess of Wales greeted the Macron’s at RAF Northolt outside London. King Charles III later formally welcomed the couple later at Windsor Castle, where they rode in a horse-drawn carriage and reviewed a military guard of honor. The first day will end with a state banquet at the castle.
Charles and Queen Camilla traveled to France in September 2023 in a visit that highlighted the historic ties between Britain and its closest European neighbor.
That royal trip came after years of sometimes prickly relations strained by Britain’s exit from the European Union and disagreements over the growing number of migrants crossing the English Channel on small boats.
President Macron’s arrival in Britain marks the first state visit by a French head of state since President Nicolas Sarkozy traveled to London in 2008.
State visits are ceremonial meetings between heads of state that are used to honor friendly nations and sometimes smooth relations between rivals. While the king formally issues the invitation for a state visit, he does so on the advice of the elected government.
State visits to Britain are particularly prized by heads of state because they come with a full complement of royal pomp and circumstance, including military reviews, carriage rides and a glittering state banquet hosted by the monarch.
The events normally take place in and around Buckingham Palace in central London. But the Macrons will stay at Windsor Castle, to the west of the capital. Buckingham Palace is undergoing extensive remodeling.
This is just the fifth state visit since King Charles ascended the throne in September 2022.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa had the honor of receiving the first invitation for a state visit during the new king’s reign and spent three days in Britain in November 2022. The leaders of Qatar, Japan and South Korea have also received the full royal treatment.
More controversially, Charles has invited U.S. President Donald Trump to make an unprecedented second state visit to Britain, which is expected to take place in the autumn.
While Prime Minister Keir Starmer is trying to bolster relations with the U.S., some U.K. lawmakers have questioned whether Trump should be awarded such an honor after he torpedoed long-standing norms for global trade, refused to condemn Russian aggression in Ukraine and proposed moving Palestinians out of the Gaza Strip.
“An invitation for a state visit is highly prized amongst world leaders,’’ said Craig Prescott, a constitutional law expert at Royal Holloway, University of London, who focuses on the political role of the monarchy. “Now, it won’t necessarily turn an enemy into an ally, but it can be part of that broader diplomatic move to maybe get the best out of someone.
“It’s that cherry on the top, but at times it could be a very valuable cherry.”
Queen Elizabeth II, Charles’ mother, hosted 112 state visits during her seven decades on the throne.
State visits are nothing if not a showcase for the British military, which has a global reputation for putting on displays of spit-and-polish precision by soldiers wearing their iconic scarlet tunics and bearskin hats.
Active duty troops who rotate from operational assignments to ceremonial duties put in thousands of hours of training to ensure everything goes off without a hitch.
Some 950 service members from all branches of the U.K. military will take part in the ceremonies, including 380 on street-lining duties and 180 in the Guard of Honor at Windsor Castle. Six military bands will perform a selection of both British and French music.
The display is seen by the British government as a nod to close defense and diplomatic ties but also hints at the ambition for the visit, which may see new defense and security commitments.
But one horse will get special attention. The Macrons will visit Fabuleu de Maucour, a horse given by the French leader to the late Queen Elizabeth II in 2022, when the nation celebrated the Platinum Jubilee marking her 70 years on the throne.
Count on the French language to be used both in private and in public.
King Charles made a point of speaking French when he addressed lawmakers in the Senate chamber in Paris on the second day of his visit to France in 2023. During that speech, the king said the alliance between Britain and France was more important than ever as he recalled how the two nations had worked together to defeat the Nazi regime.
Charles was a frequent visitor to France before becoming king, making 35 official visits to the country as heir to the throne.
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Camp vampires! Frisky throuples! How Stephanie Rothman became queen of the B-movie | Film
Stephanie Rothman first came across the term “exploitation” in a review of one of her own films. It was 1970, and her second solo-directed feature, The Student Nurses, a small-budget indie about trainees at an inner-city hospital, set against Los Angeles’s bubbling counterculture, was doing well at the US box office. (It eventually made more than $1m from a $150,000 budget.) Rothman was pleased but the review took her aback. It called it an “exploitation film” with “surprising depth”.
Fifty-five years on and Rothman is a cult legend who fully embraces the label. “I started out with a very snobbish attitude,” she says on a video call from California. “I was shocked that’s what I was making! But as time went on, I began to appreciate what I was able to do, which was to take elements of popular entertainment, weave them into a tapestry of more interesting ideas, and end up with something very different. So while I started out as a snob, I have not ended up as one.”
The seven features she directed during her brief, explosive career bear all the traditional exploitation hallmarks: low budgets, quick turnarounds, breasts, sex, violence and risque marketing campaigns. They’re also funny and subversive, with explicit politics to match the (equal opportunity) nudity.
Rothman during the making of The Student Nurses, with her husband Charles Swartz and, facing away, production manager Paul Rapp. Photograph: courtesy Stephanie Rothman Now 88, Rothman is warm and funny – and also pin-sharp and precise. The determination and clarity required of a female director pursuing her vision and preserving her principles in the male-dominated 1970s exploitation industry is fully apparent. Nevertheless, becoming exploitation’s cult heroine was not what she had in mind when she was one of three women who enrolled on a graduate film course in California in 1962, where she met her husband and future collaborator Charles S Swartz.
After graduating, she worked for pulp cinema impresario Roger Corman, the self-described “Orson Welles of the Z movie” who had built an empire by churning out low-cost, high-shock genre flicks. Always willing to take a chance on a young film-maker (as long as they delivered on schedule and under budget), he immediately put Rothman to work. Soon she was landing her first significant credits, co-directing a messy 1966 horror called Blood Bath (a salvage job, after the initial director dropped the ball), then as sole director, with Swartz as producer, on the beach movie It’s a Bikini World (1967). The 14-day shoot was hectic, but Rothman delivered on time and on budget. “I was thrilled and I threw myself into it,” she says. “I wasn’t afraid.”
The Student Nurses followed, with which she translated a thin brief – “a film about nurses, primarily sexy, with a little violence” – into a multi-layered tale. Rothman personally picked out the film’s poster, featuring four alluring nurses gazing outward under the tagline “They’re learning fast!” The film sparked a series of nursesploitation copycats. The Velvet Vampire, a seductive horror set in the California desert, was less commercially successful but has since become Rothman’s best-known film, prized for its exquisite camp and European arthouse sensibility – notably its dreamy surrealist sequences inspired by Jean Cocteau. Despite a shoestring budget and the challenges of a desert shoot (“We were always backing up into cacti”), the result was an arresting Mojave gothic with a streak of transgressive queer female sexuality.
Seductive … The Velvet Vampire (1971). When Rothman and Swartz broke away from Corman, their films became even quirkier. Group Marriage (1973), a comedy about a polycule who take on the legal system to assert their right to marry, was inspired by the theories of futurist Alvin Toffler and playwright Georges Feydeau’s farces. Rothman’s affectionate depiction of the central relationship feels prescient, as does a finale in which the group’s gay neighbours decide they’d also like to marry. “I don’t know of any other film that, at that time, had a gay wedding in it,” says Rothman. “When we showed the film, at the scene where the gay couple get married, the audience roared with laughter. Not with rage, not disdain, but surprise.”
The Working Girls, about a trio of ambitious young women who use their wiles to navigate the job market, is by far her most personal film. “I’ve always thought of it as being dedicated to the Equal Rights Amendment,” says Rothman. “A woman couldn’t get a bank account in her own name. I was a working woman, making my own living, and I couldn’t get a credit card!”
Ironically, The Working Girls did little to improve Rothman’s own finances. She was ready to break free of the exploitation genre, but while fellow graduates of Corman’s trash cinema stable such as Martin Scorsese, Peter Bogdanovich and Francis Ford Coppola managed to move into the mainstream, Rothman did not. The Working Girls, released in 1974, was her final feature.
‘Dedicated to the Equal Rights Amendment’ … The Working Girls (1974) “People often ask me why I left the industry,” she sighs. “I didn’t leave the film industry, the film industry left me. It was very frustrating. I couldn’t get work in television. I couldn’t afford to join the Directors Guild.” In the 1980s, after turning down a few offers to return to exploitation, Rothman quit the industry for good. “It wasn’t the right time to be making films for me, the opportunities weren’t there. They were there for young men, but not for me.”
Her films were rarely screened in subsequent decades, but a wave of restorations is now in motion, partly due to renewed appreciation for female “trash” cinema. A Rothman-esque spirit can be traced in work by Rose Glass (Saint Maud, Love Lies Bleeding), Coralie Fargeat (The Substance), Prano Bailey-Bond (Censor) and Julia Ducournau, director of Raw and the Palme d’Or-wining body-horror Titane.
The playfulness of Rothman’s anti-patriarchal stories also feels freshly relevant to audiences. When The Working Girls screened in Venice in 2023, she was approached by a group of students who told her it “didn’t feel dated at all”.
“That was deeply gratifying,” says Rothman, “because of my great age and their great youth! But it also shows how things have regressed.”
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Arsenal transfer news: Noni Madueke, Rodrygo, Eberechi Eze, Viktor Gyokeres latest | Football News
Arsenal are aiming to sign attacking reinforcements with Noni Madueke, Eberechi Eze, Rodrygo and Viktor Gyokeres all transfer targets. Sky Sports News’ Lyall Thomas provides the latest…
Why are Arsenal interested in Madueke?
Arsenal have been looking for a left-winger who can also play on the right and they believe Noni Madueke fits that profile.
There are understandable concerns among fans given Madueke’s preferred side is the right which, of course, is where Bukayo Saka plays.
Madueke only played seven times on the left for Chelsea last season, compared to 33 games on the right, although Enzo Maresca used him on that side in four of their last five Premier League games.
What about Rodrygo?
Real Madrid forward Rodrygo is the other top target Arsenal have for that position. It appears unlikely they are going to sign both players, but it is unclear at this stage which deal the club are prioritising.
Rodrygo would certainly be the more exciting signing given his profile and pedigree, being a two-time Champions League winner.
Reports in Spain indicate he is valued at around £69m (€80m) which is likely to be a lot more than Chelsea demand for Madueke.
Rodrygo’s future at Real Madrid is up in the air under new boss Xabi Alonso, who has given him a limited role at the Club World Cup. The Brazil forward has not started a match since their opener against Al Hilal.
The 24-year-old has become known for being a right-winger at Real Madrid, but his preferred position is on the left, which would suit Arsenal’s needs.
Would Arsenal still want Eze if they sign Gyokeres or Rodrygo?
Sky Sports News has been told Arsenal’s pursuit of Eberechi Eze, if they decide to formalise their interest, is independent of their other attacking targets. That is an exciting prospect for Arsenal fans.
Thus far, there has been no contact with Crystal Palace for Eze, who has a release clause of £60m that could rise with add-ons.
Arsenal view Eze as a No 10 who has a different profile to their captain Martin Odegaard. The England playmaker is seen as a direct option who can deliver goals from that position whereas Odegaard is a player who excels at creating for others.
Eze scored 14 goals compared to Odegaard’s six last season across all competitions.
But could Spurs win for the race for Eze?
Spurs have also expressed an interest in Eze this summer, but as it stands their focus is on other targets as they pursue a deal for Mohammed Kudus at West Ham.
The release clause ensures there will be no bidding war for Eze. The key aspect of this deal will be convincing the player of the project. Sky Sports News understands Eze is open to joining Arsenal.
The 27-year-old has ambitions of playing in the Champions League which likely narrows Arsenal’s potential competition to just four other teams. There is no certainty, however, that Eze will leave Crystal Palace.
The incentive of a season in Europe with Palace, dependent on UEFA’s judgment, is a strong argument the south London club can make to try and convince their star man to stay for another season.
With two years left on his deal, though, this might be the last summer Palace can insist interested clubs pay his release clause in full.
What would these signings mean for Trossard and Martinelli?
If Arsenal were to sign Gyokeres, Eze and one of Madueke or Rodrygo then there would certainly be a lot of competition for places at the Emirates and a big outlay on arrivals.
The need for strength in depth was made clear to Mikel Arteta and Arsenal last season when injuries derailed their season, but this number of new signings would likely leave one of Leandro Trossard and Gabriel Martinelli with a very diminished role.
Oleksandr Zinchenko faces an uncertain future and according to Sky in Italy, is of interest to AC Milan as a replacement for Theo Hernandez.
It is one to keep an eye on, though it will likely be dependent on how Arsenal get on with the rest of their business. There has already been noise about their potential exits, but it is nothing concrete at this stage.
Where do Arsenal stand with PSR?
Arsenal have plenty of room for manoeuvre in terms of the Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR) this summer but if they get all of those signings over the line there may well be a desire to make some sales to balance the books a bit.
As with all clubs, Arsenal are conscious of staying in line with the financial rules.
Sky Sports to show 215 live Premier League games from next season
From next season, Sky Sports’ Premier League coverage will increase from 128 matches to at least 215 games exclusively live.
And 80 per cent of all televised Premier League games next season are on Sky Sports.
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