Tag: Doha

  • Nigeria’s trio bow out in Doha as Assar romps into second round

    Nigeria’s trio bow out in Doha as Assar romps into second round

    Egypt’s Omar Assar advanced to the second round of the Men’s Singles at the ongoing 2025 ITTF World Championships in Doha, Qatar, with a dominant 4-1 victory over Croatia’s Frane Kojic.

    In contrast, Nigeria’s trio—Olajide Omotayo, Matthew Kuti, and Muiz Adegoke—were eliminated in the first round after suffering defeats in their respective matches.

    Assar, a quarterfinalist at the 2023 edition in Durban, South Africa, took control early in the match, employing aggressive tactics that left his Croatian opponent struggling. He won the first set comfortably, 11-7, before dropping the second 9-11. The Egyptian star quickly regained his footing, taking the next three sets 11-9, 11-5, 11-4 to seal a 4-1 victory and join Nigeria’s Quadri Aruna in the second round.

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    Adegoke began positively against Belgium’s Adrien Rassenfosse, bouncing back from a 5-11 first-set loss to win the second 11-6. However, a series of unforced errors and visible inexperience saw the Nigerian falter, eventually losing 1-4 (5-11, 11-6, 10-12, 3-11, 10-12).

    Kuti suffered a 0-4 (1-11, 11-13, 5-11, 5-11) defeat to Poland’s Samuel Kulczycki, while Omotayo went down 1-4 (10-12, 7-11, 8-11, 12-10, 5-11) to Brazil’s Leonardo Iizuka.

    In another thrilling encounter, Egypt’s Youssef Abdelaziz nearly caused a major upset, going head-to-head with Chinese superstar Lin Gaoyuan. Despite a spirited performance, Abdelaziz lost 2-4 (6-11, 11-2, 11-8, 6-11, 11-7, 11-6). Algeria’s Mehdi Bouloussa was no match to Japan’s Kenji Matsudaira as he lost 4-0 (8-11, 7-11, 3-11, 10-12).

    Africa’s remaining contenders will continue their campaign in the Men’s Singles, with Assar set to face Portugal’s Marcos Freitas and Aruna taking on Norway’s Borgar Haug.

    In the Women’s Singles, Madagascar’s Hanitra Raharimanana will clash with Germany’s Sabine Winter, while Egypt’s Hana Goda meets Brazil’s Giulia Takahashi. Meanwhile, Yousra Helmy of Egypt will face Turkey’s Sibel Altinkaya in the second round.

  • ‘Hyper sensitive “Female Athletics frown at starting block cameras

     

    Female athletes have reacted angrily to new close-up cameras at the World Athletics Championships which they say show their bodies from intimate angles.

    The miniature cameras within the athletes’ starting blocks are meant to ‘capture the intense moment just before a race’.

    But women say the camera makes them uncomfortable as they have to climb over it in the moments before a race.

    One German athlete, sprinter Gina Lückenkemper, told Bild: ‘Was a woman involved in developing this camera? I don’t think so.’

    German sprinter Gina Lückenkemper (left at the starting block) said the cameras make her uncomfortable as she has to climb over the intrusive camera in the moments before a race. She went on: ‘I find it very uncomfortable climbing over this camera in skimpy running clothes to go to the starting block.’

    Tatjana Pinto, another German competitor at the championships in Doha this week, has also complained about the new cameras.

    Athletes at the starting block of world athletics championship in Doha

    As a result, German athletics bosses have demanded that the footage only be displayed once the runners are already on the starting blocks. In addition, the camera footage will be deleted every day, the German authorities have been reassured.

    Governing body IAAF heralded the ‘innovative’ new camera angle when they announced its introduction earlier this month.

    One IAAF official apparently felt that felt ‘audience was missing a crucial moment of the drama by not being able to see the athletes’ faces at the start of sprint race’.

    ‘The new cameras within the blocks will capture that intense moment just before a race,’ IAAF broadcast director James Lord explained.

    The IAAF has already been beset by controversy over Qatar’s hosting of the athletics championships.

    Former long-distance champion Haile Gebrselassie said ‘it was a mistake to conduct the championship in such hot weather in Doha, especially the marathon race’.

     

     

  • Sebastian Coe re-elected for second term as IAAF president

     

    Sebastian Coe will remain President of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) for another four years after being re-elected unanimously with 203 votes on Wednesday.

    Coe stood unoppossed for a second term having replaced Lamine Diack in 2015. The 62-year-old’s re-election has come two days before the start of this year’s IAAF World Championships in Doha, Qatar.

    Before the election, the Congress had voted 164 to 30 in favour of the decision to extend Russia’s suspension from the IAAF. The sanction, which hit the country as a consequence for a widespread state-supported doping scandal, means Russia cannot compete under its own flag.

    Hence, Doha 2019 will be the second straight world championship, where the Russians competing will do so without their country’s flag or uniform. Russia were originally banned in November 2015, shortly after Coe’s election in Beijing. The ban has since been extended 11 times.

    IAAF Sebastian Coe acknowledging cheers

    “This was not an easy journey,” Coe told delegates following his re-election.^nbsp;

    “The first four years have been the time of change, the next will be a time of building.”

    The election for the IAAF vice-presidents began with controversy as the Athletics Integrity Unit suspended one of the candidates — Ahmed Al Kamali of the United Arab Emirates — for a “potential Violation of the IAAF Candidacy Rules and Integrity Code of Conduct”.

    But in the end, one of the main highlights was the election of the first female vice-president in the IAAF’s 117-year history. A position that went to Ximena Restrepo, the first Colombian to win an Olympic medal in athletics when she claimed a bronze in the 400 metres at Barcelona 1992.

    She was elected ahead of Canada’s Abby Hoffman, the 1963 and 1971 Pan American Games 800m gold medallist and 1966 Commonwealth Games 880 yards champion, and The Netherlands’ Sylvia Barlag, who finished 10th in the pentathlon at the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow.

  • Saraki: Education crucial for peace, security, rule of Law

    President of the Senate, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, has reiterated the importance of education in ensuring peace, security and rule of law in any society.

    Saraki, stated this while contributing to the General Debate on the theme: “Parliaments as Platforms to Enhance Education for Peace, Security and the Rule of Law” at the ongoing 140th General Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) in Doha, Qatar.

    He noted that “education is a fundamental human right – central to the development of citizens as well as what contributions they make to society,” according to a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Sanni Onogu.

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    He added that the National Assembly holds strongly that with the right education, Nigerian youths would be less susceptible to the radicalising influence of terrorist groups and other societal ills, thereby “helping to birth a more peaceful, secure and just society.”

    He however regretted that the security challenges confronting the country today are traceable to – or exacerbated by – challenges in the nation’s education sector.

    He however stated that even though Nigeria has about 13.2 million Out-of-School-Children – the highest in the world – according to the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), the 8th National Assembly has and would continue to work with the Federal Government to address the shortfall with combined strategies to enhance peace, security and the rule of law in the country.

    Saraki said: “De-radicalisation programmes for former militants or insurgents have a strong education component, and these have proven very effective for peace-building and security.

    “The Presidential Amnesty Programme for ex-Niger Delta militants involved free local and international tertiary education for former combatants. This is in recognition of the fact that education reduces youth restiveness, which in turn promotes peace.

  • Morocco to send food to Qatar after Gulf states cut ties

    Morocco to send food to Qatar after Gulf states cut ties

    Morocco said it would send plane-loads of food to Qatar to boost supplies there after Gulf Arab states cut diplomatic and economic ties with Doha.

    Qatar, which imported 80 per cent of its food from bigger Gulf Arab neighbours before the diplomatic shutdown, has also been talking to Iran and Turkey to secure food and water.

    “This decision was made in conformity with Islamic precepts that call for solidarity and mutual aid between Muslim people, notably during this holy month of Ramadan,” the Moroccan foreign ministry statement said.

    Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain accused Qatar of supporting militants, an allegation dismissed by Doha.

    On Sunday, Morocco said it would remain neutral in the dispute, offering to mediate between the Gulf countries, which are all close allies to the North African kingdom.

    Qatar’s finance minister said on Monday the world’s richest country per capita has the resources to endure and played down the economic toll of the confrontation.

    NAN reports that Qatari Foreign Minister Abdulrahman al-Thani told a news conference in France that Qatar “still had no clue” why the nations cut ties.

    He denied that Qatar supported groups like the Muslim Brotherhood that its neighbours oppose, or had warm ties with their enemy Iran.

    So far, the measures do not seem to have caused a serious shortages of supplies in shops.

    Some people have even joked about being “blockaded” inside the world’s richest country: a Twitter page called “Doha under siege” pokes fun at the prospect of readying “escape yachts”, stocking up on caviar and trading Rolex watches for espresso.

  • Oil prices tumble after Doha talks collapse

    Oil prices tumble after Doha talks collapse

    Oil prices tumbled on Monday after a meeting by major exporters in Qatar collapsed without an agreement to freeze output.

     

    Tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran were blamed for the failure which revived industry fears that major government-controlled producers will increase their battle for market share by offering ever-steeper discounts.

     

    The failure also made the credibility of the OPEC producer cartel in tatters and the world awash with unwanted fuel.

    “OPEC’s credibility to coordinate output is now very low,” said Peter Lee of BMI Research, a unit of rating agency Fitch.

     

    “This isn’t just about oil for the Saudis. It’s as much about regional politics.”

     

    Morgan Stanley said that the failed deal “underscores the poor state of OPEC relations.’’

     

    “We now see a growing risk of higher OPEC supply,” especially as Saudi Arabia threatened it could hike output following the failed deal.

     

    Oil prices have fallen by as much as 70 per cent since mid-2014 as producers have pumped one to two million barrels of crude every day in excess of demand.

     

    The oversupply has led storage tanks around the world filled to the rims with unsold fuel.

     

    Sunday’s meeting in Qatar’s capital, Doha, had been expected to finalize a deal to freeze output at January levels until October 2016 in an attempt to slow that ballooning oversupply.

     

    But the agreement fell apart after top exporter Saudi Arabia demanded that Iran, which was not represented, should also sign up.

     

    The Sunni Muslim kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Shia Islamic Republic of Iran compete for influence in the Middle East, where they are currently fighting proxy wars in Syria and Yemen.

     

    Brent crude futures fell almost seven per cent in early trading on Monday before recovering to 40.97 dollars per barrel, still down 2.15 per cent since their last settlement.

     

    Traders said only an oil worker strike in Kuwait had prevented Brent from tumbling below 40 dollars per barrel, while a cut in U.S. drilling down to 2009 levels had prevented steeper falls there.

     

    Benchmark U.S. crude futures were down more than five percent at 38.31 dollars a barrel.

     

    Goldman Sachs said the Doha no-deal could a “bearish catalyst” for U.S. crude prices, which it forecast would average 35 dollars a barrel in the current quarter.

     

    Analysts said that the failed agreement would also impact the broader economy.

     

    “In the near-term, lower oil prices are bound to weigh on investor confidence and could exacerbate financial volatility,” said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economics research at HSBC.

     

    “Concerns over financial stability in the energy sector and a further fall in drilling capex are headwinds to growth against an already fragile global economic backdrop.”

     

    With producers such as Saudi Arabia and Russia pumping near record levels and Iran also increasing output following the lifting of international sanctions against it last January, there is no end in sight for the global oil glut.

     

    Iran was the only OPEC member not to attend the Doha talks.

     

    Despite calls on Saudi Arabia to save the agreement, Riyadh, OPEC’s de facto leader, insisted that all 13 members must take part in any freeze.

     

    “It seems that for the Saudis politics and national pride are still more important than the price of oil,” said Ralph Leszczynski of shipbroker Banchero Costa.

     

    Iran has refused to stabilise production, seeking to regain market share post-sanctions.

     

    “Iran has no reason to auto-sanction themselves when they are just trying to get back some of the market share they lost in recent years due the western-imposed sanctions,” Leszczynski added.

     

    While tumbling oil prices hurt producers, straining the budgets of energy exporters from Russia to Malaysia, they can also benefit consumers.

    As a result of the failure at Doha, Barclays said that Brent would likely average 36 dollars per barrel during the second quarter of this year as a global glut continued unabated.

     

    “This meeting and its outcome should have built… trust among producers for possible future cooperation and coordinated action. In this regard, the meeting was a complete failure,” Barclays said.

     

    It added that “the failure of the talks gives the market another clear indication that OPEC’s relevance in this market environment has faded.”

  • AHEAD OF 2013  CAN U-17 Latest  victory  in Doha  excites  Eaglets

    AHEAD OF 2013 CAN U-17 Latest victory in Doha excites Eaglets

    NIGERIA’S national U-17 side have expressed satisfaction over their latest victory in Doha Qatar.

    The Golden Eaglets defeated Qatar Star League side Al Sadd of Doha at Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium otherwise known as the Old Trafford-courtesy of a goal by Ifeanyi Matthew, as they prepare for the 10th CAN Under-17 Championship.

    “It’s special to us for so many reasons,”defender Izu Omego said.

    “Apart from the fact that we beat Al-Sadd,it is a major boost towards our preparation for the Under-17 Championship.

    Meanwhile, the players have dedicated the victory to Mr. Tayo Egbaiyelo of the NFF, the Team Secretary whose birthday coincided with Friday’s match. The players noted that Dazzler as Tayo is fondly called is their father figure hence the affection.

    “This is a victory for our team secretary who has been so nice to all of us. He along with other officials has helped us but today’s victory is for him.”

    Eaglets are expected to play more friendly games.