Spain international Dani Carvajal injured his right foot during a training session for Real Madrid last week.Published On 7 May 20267 May 2026Spain...
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Spain international Dani Carvajal injured his right foot during a training session for Real Madrid last week.
Published On 7 May 20267 May 2026
Spain manager Luis de la Fuente says Dani Carvajal could still make his World Cup squad but the right back must prove his fitness and form after suffering a foot injury in training with his club Real Madrid last week.
“Carvajal is a very important figure in our dressing room,” de la Fuente said on Wednesday.
“I actually spoke with him yesterday, so I’m aware of what’s going on. He doesn’t have a specific injury, nothing serious, but he needs time to get back to his usual level.
“We’ll see in the remaining matches whether he truly gets the opportunity and delivers the performances.”
De la Fuente added that Carvajal, who made just one appearance for Spain in 2025, would understand if he is left out of the squad for the World Cup, which is being held in the United States, Canada and Mexico from June 11 to July 19.
Carvajal, 34, is approaching the final weeks of his contract with Real and has struggled for game time this season amid competition from Trent Alexander-Arnold.
Spain begin their World Cup campaign against Cape Verde on June 15 and also face Saudi Arabia and Uruguay in Group H.
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Texas and Florida are drawing the largest number of new residents, but South Carolina is growing faster than any other state as Americans continue to relocate across the country, according to new IRS data.
The trend highlights a broader shift toward the South, as Americans say they’re making the move for lower taxes, more jobs and higher quality of life.
For its size, South Carolina is seeing the biggest influx per capita of new residents from other states, equal to just over 1% of its population. In other words, for every 100 people living in the state, one new person moved in from elsewhere in the country.
Relative to its size, South Carolina grew faster than any other state in the nation.(Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group/Getty Images)
The Palmetto State added more than 59,000 residents from other states between 2022 and 2023, based on the most recently available IRS data.
The movement isn’t just about people, it’s also about income.
With the influx of residents, South Carolina gained more than 29,000 new tax filers and roughly $4.1 billion in income. This shift is likely to boost local economies in the state as new residents bring spending power and help fill open jobs in growing industries.
Zooming out, Texas and Florida are still drawing the most people overall because they’re much bigger states by size and population, so even smaller increases add up to larger total gains.
Texas led the nation in new residents with 56,473 new tax filers in 2023, followed closely by Florida with 55,349, according to the data.
The gains come as some of the nation’s most expensive states, which are run by Democrats, are seeing the biggest losses. California is down more than 100,000 tax filers and New York by nearly 72,000 from 2022 to 2023.
South Carolina saw an increase of 29,000 new tax filers, according to the latest IRS data.(Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket/Getty Images)
The income losses mirror the population decline, with California losing nearly $12 billion and New York about $10 billion — especially as some of their highest earners relocate.
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A House Democrat who’s been at the forefront of congressional efforts to scrutinize the federal government’s use of commercial spyware wants the Commerce Department to brief Capitol Hill amid apprehension that the Trump administration might further embrace the technology.
Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., sent a letter to the department Thursday seeking a briefing on several developments stemming from Immigration and Customs Enforcement acknowledging its use of Paragon’s Graphite spyware, as well as an American company purchasing a controlling stake in Israel’s NSO Group. The Commerce Department sanctioned NSO Group under former President Joe Biden after widespread abuse allegations, including eavesdropping on government officials, activists and journalists.
“The Trump Administration appears to be broadly receptive to using commercial spyware to infiltrate cell phones and allowing U.S. investment in sanctioned spyware companies like NSO Group,” Lee wrote in her letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, which CyberScoop is first reporting.
NSO Group’s new executive chairman, David Friedman, is a former Trump ambassador to Israel and was his bankruptcy attorney. He has said in November that he expects the administration will be “receptive” to using NSO Group tech.
“Given those close ties between NSO Group and the Trump Administration, and the serious concerns about how NSO’s technology could be used to spy on Americans, we write to request information regarding the purchase of NSO Group by an American company and the potential usage of NSO Group spyware by federal law enforcement,” wrote Lee, who sits on the Oversight and Government Reform panel and is the top Democrat on its Federal Law Enforcement Subcommittee.
Lee was one of the authors of a recent Democratic letter seeking confirmation of ICE’s use of Paragon’s Graphite, which ICE acknowledged. But they criticized the administration for not answering all their questions, in addition to being outraged.
In her latest letter, Lee asked the Commerce Department to brief Oversight and Government Reform Committee staff about internal department deliberations, Commerce communication with the White House and any outside conversations — including with Friedman — about government use of NSO Group technology or any other commercial spyware, and American investment in NSO.
NSO Group “appears to view the Trump administration as friendly to its interests in the United States, pitching itself as a vital tool for the U.S. government to safeguard national security,” Lee wrote, citing company court filings that it “is reasonably foreseeable that a law enforcement or intelligence agency of the United States will use Pegasus.”
The Biden administration sanctions, and court losses in a case against Meta, represented setbacks for NSO Group’s ambitions. And prior to the U.S. investment firm controlling stake purchase last fall, the Commerce Department under Trump rebuffed efforts to remove NSO Group from its sanctions list.
NSO Group maintains that its products are designed only to help law enforcement and intelligence fight terrorism and crime, and that it vets its customers in advance as well as investigates misuse. News accounts and other investigations have turned up a multitude of abuses.
There have been scattered reports of U.S. flirtation with using NSO Group technology. The FBI acknowledged it had bought a Pegasus license, but stopped short of deploying it. The Times of London reported that “it is believed” the Central Intelligence Agency used Pegasus spyware as part of a rescue mission last month for a U.S. airman downed in Iran.
US President Donald Trump says the war on Iran is ‘close to an end’ as Tehran reviews the latest peace proposal. Al Jazeera’s Almigdad Alruhaid explains Iran’s negotiating position and red lines.
British passengers onboard a cruise ship hit with a deadly outbreak of hantavirus will be asked to self-isolate in the UK for 45 days, a health official has suggested, as two passengers who left the vessel continue to isolate at home in Britain.
Neither of the two Britons who left MV Hondius at Saint Helena in late April are reporting symptoms, according to the UK Health Security Agency (UKSA).
A British crew member was medically evacuated from the ship after falling ill and flown to the Netherlands for specialist care. The Foreign Office is arranging a charter flight for remaining Britons onboard the ship who are not displaying symptoms, so they can be repatriated once docking Tenerife in the coming days.
Three people on the MV Hondius have died since 11 April. As of Thursday, there have been eight suspected cases, three of which were confirmed as hantavirus – a rare family of viruses carried by rodents – by lab testing, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
“It’s important to reassure people that the risk to the general public remains very low,” said Dr Meera Chand, the deputy director for epidemic and emerging infections at the UKHSA.
“We are standing up arrangements to support, isolate and monitor British nationals from the ship on their return to the UK and we are contact-tracing anyone who may have been in contact with the ship or the hantavirus cases to limit the risk of onward transmission.”
Medical evacuation flight after landing at Schiphol on Thursday. Photograph: Michel van Bergen/EPA
It is understood 19 British nationals were listed among the 150 passengers on the cruise, which was sailing from Argentina to Cape Verde, with four British crew members. The outbreak has been linked to a birdwatching expedition in Argentina joined by two passengers before they boarded the ship.
Officials in Argentina, from where the cruise departed, are scrambling to determine if the country was the source of the deadly outbreak. The Latin American country, which has reported 101 hantavirus infections since June 2025, is consistently ranked by the WHO as having the highest incidence of the rare, rodent-borne disease.
The UKHSA has said that once the ship docks in Tenerife, the remaining British nationals can be repatriated if they do not develop symptoms. It said that none of the British nationals onboard were reporting symptoms, but that they were being closely monitored.
Spain’s health minister, Mónica García, said on Wednesday that none of the passengers still onboard the ship were presenting symptoms of the disease and that they would be repatriated to their countries. The 14 Spaniards onboard would be flown to a hospital in Madrid to quarantine, she said.
On Monday, South African officials said a British man was in critical condition with the virus and receiving private care in Johannesburg.
About 40 passengers are believed to have disembarked the ship on the south Atlantic island of Saint Helena after the first passenger died, according to Dutch officials.
A flight attendant for the KLM airline showing mild symptoms was being tested for the virus and being admitted to hospital in Amsterdam, a Dutch health ministry spokesperson said.
Among the three individuals medically evacuated from the ship on Wednesday was Martin Anstee, a British crew member. The expedition guide and former police officer was flown to the Netherlands and spoke from hospital, saying: “I’m doing OK. I’m not feeling too bad. There are still lots of tests to be done.”
Martin Anstee was medically evacuated from the ship after falling ill. Photograph: Facebook
It was a “good sign” Anstee was able to communicate with family, said Prof Robin May, the chief scientific officer at the UKHSA, adding that he would be under investigations for some time. May also told BBC Breakfast on Thursday that the two British nationals who had left the cruise earlier on its course had returned to the UK before the outbreak was detected.
“There’s a chance they may have been exposed to the virus, so we have been in contact with them. They have agreed very kindly to self-isolate for the next period of time,” said May, who said the same process would apply to other British nationals onboard, who he suggested would be asked to self-isolate, most likely at home, for 45 days.
May said hantaviruses as a group were widespread across the world. The viruses naturally infect rodents and are “occasionally” transmitted to humans, according to the WHO, through contact with infected rodents or their urine, droppings or saliva.
Hantavirus hell: passengers stuck on cruise ship with deadly virus – The Latest
A focus is Andes hantavirus, which has shown evidence of limited human-to-human transmission in the past among close contacts, according to the WHO. Found in South America, it can cause a severe and often fatal lung disease called hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. FThe viruses are also found in Europe and Asia, and can cause haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome.
May said the Andes virus strain had been studied intently because it was “such a severe disease”, and that there were global efforts to develop vaccines against it. “This is not a virus that spreads easily between humans,” he added, but given it could spread between individuals, “we are contact tracing everyone who might have been in close contact.”
He said: “We will continue to support them and their families whilst they self-isolate, probably at home, but obviously depends very much on the individual circumstances, depending on where they live and who they live with, as to what the most appropriate mechanism is for them to self-isolate for the next 45 days.”
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Cybersecurity researchers have discovered three packages on the Python Package Index (PyPI) repository that are designed to stealthily deliver a previously unknown malware family called ZiChatBot on Windows and Linux systems.
“While these wheel packages do implement the features described on their PyPI web pages, their true purpose is to covertly deliver malicious files,” Kaspersky said. “Unlike traditional malware, ZiChatBot does not communicate with a dedicated command-and-control (C2) server, but instead uses a series of REST APIs from the public team chat app Zulip as its C2 infrastructure.”
The activity has been described as a “carefully planned and executed PyPI supply chain attack” by the Russian cybersecurity company. The names of the packages, which have since been taken down, are listed below –
uuid32-utils (1,479 downloads)
colorinal (614 downloads)
termncolor (387 downloads)
All three packages were uploaded to PyPI during a short window between July 16 and 22, 2025. While uuid32-utils and colorinal make use of similar malicious payloads, termncolor is a benign-looking package that lists colorinal as a dependency.
On Windows systems, once any of the first two packages is installed, the malicious code extracts a DLL dropper (“terminate.dll”) and write it to disk. At the time the library is imported into a project, the DLL is loaded, acting as a dropper for ZiChatBot, after which it establishes an auto-run entry in the Windows Registry, and runs code to delete itself from the host.
The Linux version of the shared object dropper (“terminate.so”) plants the malware in the “/tmp/obsHub/obs-check-update” path and configures a crontab entry. Regardless of the operating system it’s running on, ZiChatBot is designed to execute shellcode received from its C2 server. After executing the command, the malware sends a heart emoji as a response to signal the server that the operation was successful.
Exactly who is behind the campaign is not clear. However, Kaspersky said the dropper shares a “64% similarity” to another dropper used by a Vietnam-aligned hacking group named OceanLotus (aka APT32).
In late 2024, the threat actor was observed targeting the Chinese cybersecurity community with poisoned Visual Studio Code projects masquerading as Cobalt Strike plugins to deliver a trojan that’s executed automatically when the project is compiled. The malware uses the Notion note-taking service as C2, per an analysis from ThreatBook.
Kaspersky pointed out that if the PyPI supply chain campaign is indeed the work of OceanLotus, it represents the threat actor’s strategy to expand its targeting scope.
“Although phishing emails are still a common initial infection method for OceanLotus, the group is also actively exploring new ways to compromise victims through diverse supply chain attacks,” it said.
Jewish Australians have been told to use “less obviously Jewish” names, felt pressure to resign and been verbally abused by colleagues in the wake of 7 October 2023.
On its fourth day of public hearings, the antisemitism royal commission also heard evidence from Australia’s antisemitism envoy, who said hatred towards Jews had become “almost fashionable”, while a Sydney nurse said New South Wales Health was “not safe for Jewish people”.
The nurse manager and dual Australian-Israeli citizen, under the pseudonym AAV, said her fellow nurses had called her “Zionist scum” and she blamed NSW Health for failing to act.
“Having tolerated this behaviour, it means that the healthcare system is not only not safe for Jewish people; it’s potentially not safe for anyone that comes from some sort of diverse background,” she told the commission on Thursday.
After her cousin was taken hostage by Hamas on 7 October 2023, the nurse said she put posters of the hostages on her office wall and wore a necklace and yellow ribbon in their memory. She said her manager told her to remove them “because of the likelihood of them upsetting or offending other people”.
In early December 2025, her hospital’s media team rejected her request to share a “happy Hanukah” message similar to its Diwali and Christmas posts.
AAV said Jewish friends had told her they were afraid to go to hospital, a fear she shared when she went to have knee surgery in February 2025 after reports two nurses at a Sydney hospital had threatened to kill Jewish patients.
“I spent probably the worst 24 hours of my life imagining all the ways I could be killed legitimately in a hospital, particularly in the operating theatre, from putting toxic drugs into an IV to overdosing me on anaesthetic,” she said. “I was paralysed with fear.”
Sarah, a clinical psychologist, said Jewish Australians were seeking psychological healthcare as they faced growing harassment, from children asking “why do they hate us?” to adult academics.
“I have so many people that I’m seeing currently that are not welcome any more in academic spaces or in places of profession,” she said.
Sarah, who did not share her surname, said she had faced that exclusion herself. She and other Jewish colleagues left a Facebook group of about 2,500 clinical psychologists, after some were accused of taking “the side of the oppressor” for asking the group to avoid discussing Israel.
“That no longer became a safe place for us,” Sarah said.
Jillian Segal, the government’s special envoy to combat antisemitism, said young Australians had become especially hostile to Jewish people. Conflation of the Israeli government with Jewish people was Australia’s “fastest-growing” form of antisemitism, she said.
“It’s almost fashionable, so if someone that they follow online, an influencer, is of that view, they adopt that view,” Segal said.
Leading figures in Australian society had also been hesitant to speak out against antisemitism, both due to a lack of understanding and a fear of blowback, but that had changed since the Bondi terror attack, Segal said.
“I’ve been contacted by many leaders since then, wanting to be more engaged,” she said.
“There’s been a realisation that what the Jewish community was experiencing and complaining about … wasn’t a collection of isolated incidents, it wasn’t an exaggeration, it was very real and very dangerous for the country.”
Workplace shame
The fourth day of hearings at the royal commission heard from Jewish Australians who had been targeted in the workplace and lost work over anti-Jewish and anti-Israel sentiment.
One woman, speaking under the pseudonym ABM, said she had left an Australian-owned global company after her chief executive asked her to use a “less obviously Jewish” name.
The employee said she had last year replaced an Israel-based employee who had left after an overseas stakeholder in a “big commercial partnership” declared it did not want to work with the company’s Israeli division.
ABM said she had been advised by the company’s chief executive to use a different name and to changeher email signature and internal directories. She agreed, feeling she had no choice, but resigned months later.
“I felt a sense of shame that I hadn’t felt before,” she said.
“It really made me question whether or not I can be outwardly and openly Jewish in professional workplaces.”
Stephanie Cunio, a longtime Sydney trade unionist and climate activist, said she felt she had to step down from the board of a green advocacy group as younger members fought the leadership to campaign against Israel.
“I got called up by a board member and the board member said: ‘I know this is getting very difficult for you, um, you know, maybe you should consider leaving,’” Cunio said.
An Israeli musician, speaking under the pseudonym ABK, said he had taken a break from performing, affecting his income, after facing protesters at his show and campaigns to cancel his performances.
“I’m forced now to call venues upfront and tell them you might get hate because I’m Israeli, which I’ve done just now, just a few weeks ago” he said.
“I am scared to play and I’m always thinking: ‘Is there someone in the crowd that knows that I’m Israeli and is here with a gun?’”
Others saw their workplaces destroyed, with the owners of Lewis’ Continental Kitchen telling the commission of the alleged targeted attack that burned down their kosher restaurant in Bondi in 2024.
Judith Lewis told the inquiry she had lost the restaurant she and her family had set up and run for 54 years.
“A lot of people came and met there, and were able to sit and eat and then see other people there, it was a communal centre,” Lewis said.