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Gaza mother’s grim ordeal: A search for missing son among mutilated bodies | Israel-Palestine conflict

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Gaza City, Gaza Strip – With exhausted steps and eyes filled with tears, Hanaa al-Mabhuh moves between the hall displaying photographs of bodies and the morgue at al-Shifa Hospital in a grim search for any trace of her missing son.

The 56-year-old mother wipes away tears with the back of her hand and stares at the decomposed faces on the screen, torn between the desire to find out what happened to her youngest child, while at the same time fearing he might be among the dead handed over by Israel under a US-brokered ceasefire deal.

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Thousands of Palestinians from Gaza have been seeking information on loved ones who went missing since the war began after the deadly October 7, 2023 raid by Hamas.

Driven by her need for closure, Hanaa returns to scan the images on the screens one more time.

“This boy is a piece of me,” Hanaa tells Al Jazeera, referring to 18-year-old Omar, who disappeared along with one of his cousins, Alaa, when they went to inspect the ruins of their home in Jabaliya refugee camp in northern Gaza last June. Omar, a high school student, was the youngest among his seven siblings.

“Every child is precious to his family, but my son is a part of me,” she adds, tears streaming down her cheeks as she walks toward the morgue.

The family contacted the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and several human rights organisations to try to find out what happened to Omar and his cousin, but to no avail.

Hanaa says the wait has been heartbreaking.

“We do not know whether they are prisoners, or whether they [the Israelis] killed them and took their bodies or detained their bodies along with those bodies they release in batches.”

“We are running as if in a mirage and we do not know anything,” says Hanaa, falling silent as if trying to catch her breath.

INTERACTIVE-GAZA CEASEFIRE-Feb 15, 2026_Death toll tracker-1765554400

Since Israel began returning Palestinian bodies to Gaza through the Karem Abu Salem (Kerem Shalom) crossing, Hanaa has become one of hundreds of family members moving between hospitals and reception points seeking any clues to the fate of their loved ones.

The latest batch of bodies came on February 4. Gaza’s Health Ministry said 54 bodies and 66 boxes containing human remains, released by Israel via the ICRC, had been received.

The remains arrived at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, where medical and technical teams began initial examinations and documentation before presenting them to families for possible identification.

Human rights organisations say handovers occur through the Red Cross in accordance with international rules, but these procedures do not always include detailed documentation or the circumstances of death, increasing the burden on Gaza authorities to classify bodies and attempt identification amid limited capacity to conduct DNA testing.

Since the latest handover, Hanaa has gone to the hospital several times to review lists and photographs of the bodies.

“I have not left any place without going to it. I even went to Khan Younis in the south of the Strip to check the photos,” she says.

The bodies were returned under the United States-brokered October 2025 truce agreement between Israel and Hamas, which stipulated that the remains of 15 Palestinians would be exchanged for the bodies of every Israeli held in Gaza.

As of last month, Israeli authorities continue to hold the bodies of more than 770 Palestinians in what is known as the “cemeteries of numbers and morgues“, according to the National Campaign for the Recovery of Martyrs’ Bodies and Disclosing the Fate of the Missing.

Hanaa’s suffering does not stop at reviewing Palestinian bodies. She also checks the lists of prisoners released by Israel from time to time, contacting the ICRC to try to confirm if her son’s name appears.

“By God, the Red Cross has memorised me and my voice from how much I call and ask. They tell me: ‘Sister, aren’t you the one who called last time?’ I tell him: ‘Yes, my brother. Forgive me, it is not in my hands.’ He sympathises with me,” she says.

Despite the gruelling effort, there is still no decisive answer about her son’s fate.

“My heart as a mother wishes that my son is alive. But I prepare myself for the worst possibilities, and even this psychological preparation has brought no result,” Hanaa says.

‘Why do they leave us lost?’

Hanaa says the hardest part is not only the loss, but the state of confusion and disorientation she lives through, along with hundreds of members of other families still searching for their relatives.

“Why do they leave us lost like this? We don’t know where they went or what their fate is,” she says.

Another grim aspect is witnessing the “pitiful condition” in which the bodies are returned by Israel’s military. “All the features are completely buried, and I cannot even distinguish my son’s features.”

Hanaa says she believes the mutilation is “deliberate” to increase the pain of Palestinian families. “It is as if they want to leave us in grief for a lifetime … to mourn our children without end,” she says, tears unceasing.

“My son was in the prime of his youth, like a flower, when he was lost. He was preparing to sit for his high school exams with his cousin. What did they do to disappear like this and for us not to know their fate until now?”

Since the war began in October 2023, the fate of bodies held by Israel has emerged as a central humanitarian and legal issue in the conflict. Israel does not publish a unified list of named bodies it holds.

According to a statement by the Red Cross, it has “facilitated the transfer of 360 Palestinian bodies to Gaza since October 2023”, supported the handover of 195 Israeli captives, including 35 deceased, and the return of 3,472 Palestinian prisoners alive.

Only 99 returned Palestinian bodies have been definitively identified, according to the Health Ministry. The rest remain unidentified or are still undergoing identification procedures.

The ministry said some corpses show gunshot wounds to the head and chest, shrapnel injuries, fractures to the skull and limbs, in addition to advanced decomposition – greatly complicating forensic identification.

"Every child is precious to his family, but my son is a piece of me," Hanaa Al-Mabhuh said
‘Every child is precious to his family, but my son is a part of me,’ says grieving mother Hanaa al-Mabhuh [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera]

Appeal for international help

Hanaa called on international organisations to intervene to assist grieving families such as hers to determine the fate of their children.

“We cannot calm down or stabilise psychologically or socially. We are under enormous psychological pressure,” she says.

“They plowed the earth completely and exhumed graves searching for Israeli bodies with equipment and tests. But our children, no one asks about them. By what logic does this happen?”

At Gaza’s forensic department, a small team handles this heavy burden under conditions that exclude tools of “definitive confirmation”, leaving staff and families in a wide space of doubt.

Ahmed Abu Taha, head of the bodies and missing persons files at the Health Ministry, tells Al Jazeera that 120 corpses recently arrived in Gaza via the ICRC. Some came complete, while others were simply bone fragments and other human remains.

Out of the 120, only two bodies were identified, and even those were not scientifically conclusive.

“Confirmatory” tests such as DNA analysis, forensic anthropology, and forensic odontology are unavailable in Gaza’s destroyed healthcare system, meaning only “presumptive” testing can be conducted, which is less precise, says Abu Taha.

“The steps begin with presumptive testing – looking at distinguishing marks, clothes, whether male or female, estimating age, identifying distinguishing features such as amputations or tattoos… Then you move to confirmatory testing. But unfortunately, in Gaza we only have presumptive testing.”

This type of testing “is prone to many errors” including misidentification, he adds.

INTERACTIVE - GAZA HEALTHCARE SYSTEM - FEB 3 2026-1770124823

When error becomes tragedy

The most painful aspect, Abu Taha says, is the impact an “error” has on families waiting desperately to find the body of a missing child. Repeated misidentifications have been recorded, causing shock and reopening wounds for many Palestinians.

Abu Taha recounts one story that deeply affected him and illustrates the psychological and emotional damage inflicted on families amid the absence of accurate DNA tests.

“On one occasion, members of a family came and identified a body as their son. They presented evidence that closely matched the body. The forensic team examined it and found similarities, and indeed the body was handed over to that family.”

Grieving relatives completed the formal procedures for receiving the body, obtained a death certificate, then proceeded with funeral rites and burial. They announced a wake to receive mourners.

But a shock came when, only two days after the burial, another family presented more conclusive evidence that showed the deceased person belonged to them.

Abu Taha says the harrowing incident has been repeated inside Gaza’s beleaguered hospitals.

He is calling for international intervention to pressure Israel to allow the entry of identification equipment and DNA testing tools as an ethical and humanitarian matter to end the suffering of families struggling to identify loved ones and give them a proper burial.

“The file of the bodies is not merely a numerical issue,” Abu Taha says.



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Jaxson Dart dishes on Lane Kiffin, John Harbaugh

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Lane Kiffin stirred controversy when he decided to leave Ole Miss for LSU.

Kiffin instantly became the most hated man in Oxford after leaving the Rebels high and dry just as the College Football Playoff was set to begin, accepting a contract reportedly worth nearly $100 million.

One of Kiffin’s former Ole Miss quarterbacks, however, respected the coach’s decision.

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Jaxson Dart and Lane Kiffin

Jaxson Dart of the Mississippi Rebels celebrates after being named MVP alongside head coach Lane Kiffin after the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl against the Duke Blue Devils at EverBank Stadium on Jan. 2, 2025, in Jacksonville, Florida. (James Gilbert/Getty Images)

“I understand it was a hard decision for him,” New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart said to Fox News Digital on radio row. 

“Just because of all that was kind of offered at LSU. I have my relationship and my ties are at Ole Miss. So I’m excited for the future of Ole Miss and Pete [Golding] and the way that the organization and program are going to go, but I also have a lot of love for coach Kiff and know that he’s going to do a good job as well.”

Dart’s Giants, of course, had their own head coaching search, but Dart said he did not put Kiffin’s name in the hat. He is, however, ecstatic about John Harbaugh.

John Harbaugh

New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh speaks at the press conference announcing his hiring at Quest Diagnostics Training Center. (Ed Mulholland/Imagn Images)

NFL STARS HIGHLIGHT THEIR ON-FIELD WINGMEN TEAMMATES, HOW THEY MAKE EACH OTHER SUCCESSFUL

“Obviously he was the hottest name out there on the market, and, he was the guy that we all wanted,” Dart said of his new head coach. “So when we heard and had the opportunity that we were going to get to play for him, everybody was excited and fired up about it. I just think that who he is as a person and his identity is something that’s very respected among the league.

“From the conversations that I had, he views the game the exact same way that I do, that we do, and, you know, can’t wait to get this thing rolling in the right direction.”

John Harbaugh smiles

“Obviously he was the hottest name out there on the market, and, he was the guy that we all wanted,” Dart said of his new head coach John Harbaugh. (Adam Hunger/AP Photo)

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The Giants fired Brian Daboll during the season after numerous blown fourth-quarter leads. Harbaugh was let go by the Baltimore Ravens after 18 seasons.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter



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India rout bitter rivals Pakistan at T20 World Cup | Cricket News

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Defending champions India have thumped Pakistan by 61 runs in a grudge Group A match at the Twenty20 World Cup in Colombo, Sri Lanka, to secure their place in the Super Eight stage of the cricket tournament.

Suryakumar Yadav’s side made 175-7 after a flying start from Ishan Kishan’s superb 77, before bowling Pakistan out for 114 in 18 overs.

The defeat on Sunday extended Pakistan’s dismal record against India in World Cups.

India have now won eight of the sides’ nine meetings at T20 World Cups, as well as all eight of their encounters at ODI World Cups.

The cricket teams of the nuclear-armed, contentious neighbours only face each other in multi-nation tournaments at neutral venues under a longstanding compromise arrangement.

It has been more than 18 years since India and Pakistan last met in a Test match, and 13 years since either side crossed the border to play a bilateral series.



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Schumer fights GOP citizenship voting requirement bill in Senate chamber

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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vowed Sunday that Senate Democrats will block the latest GOP-backed effort to require proof of citizenship to vote.

“We will not let it pass in the Senate,” Schumer told CNN’s Jake Tapper. “We are fighting it tooth and nail. It’s an outrageous proposal that is, you know, that shows the sort of political bias of the MAGA right. They don’t want poor people to vote. They don’t want people of color to vote because they often don’t vote for them.”

Schumer’s comments came after Tapper pressed him on his opposition, noting that polling shows roughly 83% of Americans support some form of voter identification. That figure comes from a Pew Research poll published last year that found 71% of Democratic voters surveyed supported presenting an ID to vote.

COLLINS BOOSTS REPUBLICAN VOTER ID EFFORT, BUT WON’T SCRAP FILIBUSTER

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., announced that Democrats wouldn’t accept a funding extension to DHS with just days left until a partial shutdown.  (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Still, Schumer and most Senate Democrats have criticized the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act, which passed the House last week and is expected to face a vote in the Senate.

The bill would require proof of citizenship to register to vote and would establish a system for state election officials to share information with federal authorities to verify voter rolls. It would also allow the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to pursue immigration cases if non-citizens are found listed as eligible voters.

Schumer and his caucus have panned the bill as voter suppression targeting poorer Americans and minority groups.

FETTERMAN SLAMS DEMOCRATS’ ‘JIM CROW 2.0’ VOTER ID RHETORIC AS PARTY UNITY FRACTURES

Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa.

Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., bucked his party once more on their messaging against voter ID legislation gaining momentum in the Senate, arguing that it wasn’t “a radical idea.”  (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

“What they are proposing in this so-called SAVE Act is like Jim Crow 2.0,” Schumer said. “They make it so hard to get any kind of voter ID that more than 20 million legitimate people, mainly poorer people and people of color, will not be able to vote under this law.”

Without support from Senate Democrats — save for a possible defection from Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa. — the bill is likely to fail.

The only way around that would be eliminating the Senate’s 60-vote filibuster threshold — a move Republicans oppose — or forcing a so-called talking filibuster that could require hours of debate and stall other Senate business.

HARDLINE CONSERVATIVES DOUBLE DOWN TO SAVE THE SAVE ACT

DHS Secretary Krist Noem

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s assertion of her agency’s involvement in elections a “load of bull.”  (Ash Ponders/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Schumer also pushed back on comments from DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, who earlier this week said elections “may be one of the most important things that we need to make sure we trust, is reliable, and that when it gets to Election Day that we’ve been proactive to make sure that we have the right people voting, electing the right leaders to lead this country.”

The comments come as Senate Democrats and the White House negotiate funding for DHS, which has been shut down since midnight Friday.

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Part of those negotiations includes Democrats’ demand that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents be kept away from several areas, including schools and polling places.

“That’s a load of bull,” Schumer said. “They show no evidence of voter fraud. They show there’s so little in the country. And to have ICE agents, these thugs, be by the polling places, that just flies in the face of how democracy works, of how we’ve had elections for hundreds of years, very successfully.”



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Up Police: Sambhal SOG Team Suspended On Charges Of Extortion From Scrap Dealer

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The entire team of SOG has been suspended by SP Krishna Kumar Bishnoi. Eight policemen including the in-charge are involved. There is an allegation of collecting Rs 30 thousand from a scrap dealer and stopping his scrap. On the basis of the complaint, the SP got the investigation done by Sambhal CO Alok Kumar Bhati. The investigation found the matter to be true. In this sequence, suspension action has been taken on Sunday. SP has made Bobindra Sharma in charge of SOG.



Kabadi Zafaruddin, a resident of Bilari, Moradabad, along with his son Aas Mohammad, was going towards Ladam Sarai of Sambhal with a scrap mobile plate on the night of 2nd February at around 9 pm. Meanwhile, the SOG team stopped the junkyard father-son bike and brought it to Chaudhary Sarai, the police post of Sambhal Kotwali area.

The matter was resolved after the intervention of mediators. It is alleged that Rs 30,000 was recovered from the father and son for releasing them as scrap dealers. Also, the team kept the metal that comes out after melting the mobile plate. The scrap metal father and son left during the night but contacted the team on February 3 and asked to return the metal.

It is alleged that the team also asked for 40 thousand rupees in return of returning the bag full of metal, whereas the bag contained metal worth only 40 thousand rupees. Only after this the complaint reached the SP. Upon investigation, the matter was found to be true and action has been taken. SP said that in the preliminary investigation the complaint was found to be true. Due to this, in-charge SI Mohit Chaudhary, Head Constable Kulwant, Arshad, Constable Ajnabi, Ayush, Vivek, Brijesh and Hiresh have been suspended. SP said that SOG in-charge Bobindra Sharma has been made.

Suspended SOG team had failed in many big cases
The main accused in the murder of BJP leader Gulfam Singh in Junwai police station area was also not caught by the SOG team. Surrendered in Badaun court. Similarly, the accused of murder of two brothers in Dhanari police station area remained absconding for a long time and later surrendered in the court.

Similarly, even after the disappearance of a seven year old girl in Kailadevi police station area, the team could not find any clue. Whereas SOG plays an important role for the police station. But the suspended SOG team had failed in many major cases.

Ukraine’s ex-energy minister arrested while trying to cross border | Corruption News

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German Galushchenko was detained by Ukraine’s anti-corruption bureau while trying to leave the country.

Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) says it has arrested the country’s former energy minister, German Galushchenko, who resigned in November amid a massive corruption scandal, as he tried to cross Ukraine’s border.

“Today, while crossing the state border, NABU detectives have detained the former Minister of Energy as part of the ‘Midas’ case,” the NABU said in a statement.

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It did not name Galushchenko in its statement, but he served as the country’s energy minister last year and resigned in November.

“Initial investigative proceedings are ongoing, carried out in accordance with the requirements of the law and court sanctions. Details to follow,” the NABU added.

Galushchenko was one of several ministers who resigned in 2025 as the NABU unveiled an alleged money-laundering conspiracy in the country’s energy sector that investigators believe was orchestrated by an ally of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

According to Ukraine’s Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO), the alleged $100m scheme was orchestrated by businessman Timur Mindich.

SAPO’s investigators say Galushchenko helped Mindich manage illicit financial flows in the energy sector, while contractors working with Energoatom were forced to pay bribes of 10 to 15 percent to avoid losing contracts or facing payment delays.

Ukraine’s previous two energy ministers had resigned amid the fallout from the scandal, which ⁠also claimed the job of Zelenskyy’s chief of staff.

The two ministers ⁠and the chief of staff ⁠have all denied wrongdoing.

Battling corruption is a key priority in Ukraine’s reform effort as it eyes membership in the European Union, ‌which requires the country to shake off a decades-old scourge of graft.

Authorities in recent weeks have targeted lawmakers, ‌former Prime ‌Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and a former presidential adviser over various charges.



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Tom Homan tells Minnesota leaders be grateful for immigration enforcement

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Border czar Tom Homan said Minnesota leaders should be grateful that the Trump administration made their state safer after some called on the federal government to reimburse damages they claim were caused during immigration enforcement operations.

A lot of things were broken, but it wasn’t because of Trump administration,” Homan said Sunday on “Fox & Friends Weekend.”

“The border — last four years, over 10 million illegal immigrants crossed that border. That was broken. Where were they then? Did Governor Walz speak out against that, with the overdose deaths and the sex trafficking and… terrorists? No.”

TRUMP DEFENDS MINNEAPOLIS FEDERAL ENFORCEMENT, SAYS CRIME PLUNGED AFTER ‘THOUSANDS OF CRIMINALS’ REMOVED

Tim Walz, Tom Homan, Jacob Frey

Border czar Tom Homan pushed back on requests for federal funds made by Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey. (Steve Karnowski/AP Photo; Go Nakamura/Reuters; Annabelle Gordon/Reuters)

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey publicly requested federal funds after what they described as the major economic impact of recent immigration enforcement operations, while Homan argued the mission was a “great success” that made Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests safer and reduced sanctuary-style barriers to cooperation.

Frey claimed his city sustained “$203 million in economic impact in just January alone.”

“And so we’re calling on the federal government to fully step up, to provide direct financial assistance to our city,” he said at a press conference.

Federal agent in Minnesota

Federal agents prepare to depart the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on Feb. 4, 2026, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, after border Czar Tom Homan announced that 700 immigration enforcement personnel would be withdrawn from the state amid the winding down of Operation Metro Surge. (John Moore/Getty Images)

TRUMP’S OPERATION METRO SURGE LOCATED 3,000 MISSING MIGRANT CHILDREN IN MINNEAPOLIS, EMMER SAYS

Walz said the federal government needed “to pay for what they broke.” He proposed a $10 million emergency relief package for small businesses across the state affected by the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

The proposal calls for forgivable loans ranging from $2,500 to $25,000 to be distributed to eligible businesses that are able to demonstrate “substantial revenue loss” during “specified dates” tied to Operation Metro Surge.

Homan argued that Democrats “broke the border” and President Donald Trump repaired it, adding that Minnesota refused to work with ICE because it is a “sanctuary state.”

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“Their county jails weren’t working with us across the state. So, you know what? We fixed it. They ought to be saying thank you. The state’s safer because of that,” he said, adding that ICE agents are also much safer making arrests in a jail than on the street.

The border czar also pointed to “over 4,000 arrests,” including “14 illegal aliens with homicide convictions, [and] 87 [with] sexual assaults, mostly of children.”

Fox News Digital’s Michael Sinkewicz contributed to this report.



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Is Trumpism losing steam? | Donald Trump

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As Trumpism forces both major US parties to wonder what they stand for, experts weigh in on November election prospects.

The Republican Party currently controls the White House and both houses of Congress in the United States. But will that change in November?

Among Republican voters, US President Donald Trump is still wildly popular, despite criticism over uneven economic conditions and brutal anti-immigration tactics. And within the Democratic Party establishment, there is no sign of a desire to shift towards a more progressive, less centrist platform – even as left-leaning Democratic Socialists make gains.

Host Steve Clemons asks Republican strategist John Feehery and Amy Dacey, former chair of the Democratic National Committee, about Trumpism and the election prospects of both parties.



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Curling controversy engulfs the Olympics

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The controversy in Olympic curling expanded on Sunday as Team Great Britain’s men’s team was hit with the same violation that hurt the Canadians two days in a row.

Britain was taking on Germany in round-robin play when officials said Scottish curler Bobby Lammie touched a stone after releasing it down the ice. Britain had a stone removed due to the “double-touching,” but still ended up with a 9-4 win.

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Bobby Lammie with the rock

Britain’s Bobby Lammie in action during the men’s curling round robin session against Germany, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026.  (AP Photo/Misper Apawu)

The issue first sparked Friday night when the Swedish men’s team accused Canada of “double-touching.” A stone was then removed in the Canadian women’s matchup against Switzerland. Videos circulating around social media appeared to show both Canadian curlers committing the penalties. But both teams denied wrongdoing.

World Curling said beginning Saturday it would designate two officials to move between the four curling matches during each round but noted it was “not possible” to have umpires stationed at each hog line – the line where stones must be released by hand.

CANADIAN HOCKEY STAR TOM WILSON EJECTED FROM OLYMPIC GAME FOR FIGHTING

Bobby Lammie looks on

Britain’s Bobby Lammie in action during the men’s curling round robin session against Germany, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026. ( (AP Photo/Misper Apawu)

On Sunday, World Curling said two umpires who previously were actively monitoring deliveries will now only monitor athletes’ deliveries at the request of the competing teams.

Sweden’s Johanna Heldin, an alternate on the women’s team, worried about the pace of play being disrupted with the extra surveillance.

“If they bring that in, I think it probably disrupts the speed of play,” said Johanna Heldin, the alternate for the Swedish women’s team. “We’ve always been a game that tries to play by the rules and have that high sportsmanship level, so hopefully we can figure that back out.”

American Tara Peterson expressed support for more replay.

“There’s instances where an instant replay would be huge,” she said.

Canada's Marc Kennedy lines up a shot

Canada’s Marc Kennedy in action during the men’s curling round robin session against China, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026.  (AP Photo/Misper Apawu)

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Until Sunday, the allegations had been limited to Canadian curlers. But now, British curlers have also been engulfed in the controversy.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Fast-spreading measles outbreak takes hold among under-10s in north London | MMR

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A big measles outbreak in north-east London is affecting unvaccinated children under the age of 10, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has confirmed.

UKHSA previously reported 34 laboratory-confirmed measles cases among children who attend schools and nurseries in Enfield from 1 January to 9 February, with some requiring hospital treatment.

Measles is a highly infectious viral illness that can spread very easily among people who are not fully vaccinated. While many people recover, the illness can lead to serious complications such as pneumonia, brain inflammation and, in rare cases, long-term disability or death.

Dr Vanessa Saliba, a consultant epidemiologist at the UKHSA, said: “Our latest data shows we are now seeing a big measles outbreak in north-east London, mostly affecting unvaccinated children under 10 in schools and nurseries, with some being hospitalised.

“Measles is a nasty illness for any child but for some it can lead to long-term complications and, tragically, death, but [it] is so easily preventable with two doses of the MMRV vaccine.” The MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) was replaced by the MMRV with the addition of chickenpox (varicella) to the vaccination.

Saliba urged families to ensure their children have not missed any doses. She said: “With Easter holidays fast approaching, it is a timely reminder to families travelling overseas to ensure all family members, especially children, are vaccinated, as measles is widespread in some countries with close links to the UK and there are ongoing outbreaks in parts of Europe.”

Global health officials announced earlier this year that the UK was no longer considered to have eliminated measles after reporting almost 4,000 infections since 2024.

The outbreak comes amid declining uptake of the MMRV vaccine across the UK, with only about 84% of children receiving both doses by the age of five, well below the 95% level needed to prevent outbreaks.

Enfield has one of the lowest MMRV vaccine uptake rates in the country, according to UKHSA figures from last August, which showed just 64.3% of five-year-olds in the borough received both doses in 2024-25.

The Sunday Times reported that more than 60 suspected cases of measles had been reported by seven schools and a nursery in Enfield.

A message posted on the borough’s Ordnance Unity Centre for Health GP surgery website described a “fast-spreading measles outbreak”. It said: “During this recent outbreak, one in five children have been hospitalised due to measles and all of them had not been fully immunised.”

Alev Cazimoglu, Enfield council’s cabinet member for health and social care, said: “The current outbreak has mainly affected children and some have required additional care with a short stay in hospital. Measles is one of the most infectious known diseases. It is approximately six times more infectious than Covid-19.

“Catching the measles is entirely preventable, but it spreads extremely quickly where vaccination levels are low. By checking your family’s vaccination status and taking up the free NHS vaccine, you are protecting not only yourselves but also vulnerable members of our community.”

Dudu Sher-Arami, Enfield’s director of public health, is writing to every parent in the area to try to contain the spread of the disease. Temporary vaccination centres have been established in schools across the borough in an effort to boost immunisation levels.

Sher-Arami told the Sunday Times the outbreak had the potential to cause a “much greater and bigger pan-London outbreak” as people travel across the city for work and school.

She said average vaccination figures – which are low across the city – masked significant pockets of very low uptake, which created prime areas for measles to spread.

Modelling of a large measles outbreak in London by the UKHSA suggests between 40,000 and 160,000 people could become infected. Last July a child died from measles in Liverpool after a small outbreak there.

Since the start of the year there have been 96 confirmed cases of measles in England, three-quarters affecting children under 10. Enfield has had the highest numbers, followed by Birmingham.

There is no specific treatment for measles, only the vaccination to prevent catching it.

Although the vaccination has been proven to be safe and effective, now-debunked claims that the injection was linked to autism have persisted on social media and among some minority ethnic communities, contributing to vaccine hesitancy.

Measles spreads through coughs and sneezes and by touching contaminated surfaces, making it extremely easy to pass on in schools. Early symptoms include a high fever, runny nose, sneezing, coughing and red, watery eyes. A blotchy red-brown rash usually appears a few days later, starting on the face before spreading across the body.



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