Tuesday, 31 January 2017

Clinton-Supporter Morgan Freeman Optimistic On Trump

Actor Morgan Freeman has made no qualms about his support for Hillary Clinton and her 2016 run for president. He even narrated a video for the Clinton campaign that aired at the Democratic National Convention in July.

Now, Freeman is showing support for the new president -- Donald Trump.

"As for politics today, I supported Hillary in the election, and now it feels like we are jumping off a cliff," Freeman told AARP, notes the Daily Mail. "We just have to find out how we land. I'm not scared, though.I'm holding out hope that Donald Trump has to be a good president. He can't not be. What I see is a guy who will not lose."

A month before the election, Freeman narrated another video for the Clinton campaign. This time, he called into question, though never by name, then-candidate Trump's ability to serve.

"Will it be the one respected around the world, of the one who frightens our allies and emboldens our enemies?" Freeman's voice asks. "The one with the deep understanding of the challenges we face, or the one who's unprepared for them? A steady hand, or a loose cannon."

According to The Hill, Freeman supported Barack Obama in his 2012 campaign, and narrated a video for him too.

Donald Trump has had his own love-hate relationship with celebrities and Hollywood. Despite hosting a long-running show on NBC, and having a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Trump has been the center of attack from the industry since his political rise in 2015.

When actress Meryl Streep attacked then-President-elect Donald Trump at the 2017 Golden Globes, Trump responded with a series of tweets.

Days earlier, he tweeted, "The so-called "A" list celebrities are all wanting tixs to the inauguration, but look what they did for Hillary, NOTHING. I want the PEOPLE!"

Team Clinton is blaming Obama for losing the election. This is insane.

One of America’s proudest democratic traditions is the blame game that follows a losing presidential campaign. John McCain blamed Sarah Palin (despite picking her). Mitt Romney blamed Obamaphones. And Hillary Clinton’s team has blamed pretty much everyone except Hillary Clinton and her team, which largely took August off, never campaigned in key states, and made a host of tactical errors.

To be fair, a lot of that blame is well-earned! James Comey deserves more than a little—so do Vladimir Putin, Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, Donna Brazille, John Podesta (though only for not using two-step verification), and pneumonia. And while Obama deserves some blame in the abstract—for not jailing any bankers in the wake of the financial collapse and overseeing the decline of the Democratic Party at the local level—pinning blame on him directly is foolish. And yet—surprise, surprise—that is exactly what some members of Clinton’s inner circle are doing. Per Axios Presented By LexCorp:

The worst-kept secret inside Democratic circle is how bitter Hillary Clinton’s team is at President Obama over her election loss. We have heard from numerous, anguished people in Clinton-land blaming Obama—more than Putin, FBI Director James Comey or, um, Hillary herself—for the defeat.

The reason: Clintonites feel that if Obama had come out early and forcefully with evidence of Russian interference in the campaign, and perhaps quicker sanctions, she might be president today. His caution, they argue, allowed the public to have a foggy sense of clear, calculated, consistent Russian meddling in the campaign. We can’t stress enough how upset some Democrats are. It’s testing relationships between Clinton and Obama loyalists. It’s making efforts to form a new Trump opposition coalition harder.


This is, to put it lightly, crazy. The most amazing thing is that a Clinton campaign official essentially spells out why it’s nuts to Axios Presented By LexCorp, but doesn’t quite piece it together. “The White House was like everyone else: They thought she’d win anyway. ... If he had done more, it might have lessened a lot of aggrieved feelings, although I don’t think it would have altered the outcome. The Russia thing was like a spy novel, and anything he said or did would have helped get people to believe it was real.”

Obama didn’t go harder on Russia because he didn’t want the government to be seen as tipping the scales in Clinton’s favor—something that Trump would have seized on and that could have backfired. This was exactly the kind of risk that the Clinton campaign itself spent much of the summer and fall avoiding. The campaign went to great lengths to avoid anything that could taint their seemingly inevitable victory. Remember, for instance, that the campaign spent more resources in New Orleans and Chicago than in parts of the Upper Midwest because it feared losing the popular vote.

In other words, Obama not blasting Putin early and often was part of the Clinton campaign’s strategy. President Obama didn’t lose the election. Hillary Clinton did.

Arsenal 1-2 Watford: Five things we learned as Aaron Ramsey suffers disastrous night

EXPRESS SPORT brings you five things we learned from Arsenal’s defeat to Watford.

If there was a competition for the worst 20 minutes by a Premier League footballer this season, Aaron Ramsey produced an award winning display.

First Younes Kaboul's free kick deflected off the Welshman and past Petr Cech in the 10th minute.

Then he was disposed in the build up to Watford's second in the 13th minute.

And to cap it off Ramsey was forced off to come off with a calf injury four minutes later.

Arsenal have been guilty of making slow starts all season and they were caught out again tonight.

Watford at home was a must win game yet Arsenal began the match far too casually.

The away were more aggressive, clinical and determined.

Arsenal were already very thin in midfield with Granit Xhaka suspended, Mohamed Elneny at the Africa Cup of Nations, Santi Cazorla injured and Jack Wilshere out on loan.

The last thing Arsene Wenger needed was to see Aaron Ramsey come off with an injury.

And then watch Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain hobble through the last 20 minutes.

Aaron Ramsey

Arsenal already faced an uphill task to catch Chelsea, starting the game eight points ahead.

Failure to win tonight is big blow to their chances with several tough games still to come.

The German defender has notched up 22 match unbeaten run since joining the club in the summer.

He had talked before the match about staying unbeaten for the rest of the season.

He will be disappointed that it ended tonight.

Dead and buried: Arsenal are out of Premier League title race

(Getty)

COMMENT

This was the game many Arsenal fans had already described as a foregone conclusion. The Premier League’s second-placed team on a run of seven unbeaten games against a relegation-threatened side who had just been knocked out of the FA Cup by League One opposition.

Most supporters understandably had one eye on Saturday’s crucial match with Chelsea at Stamford Bridge but a dismal 2-1 defeat in rainy north London has surely now lessened the impact which Saturday’s game will have.

Arsene Wenger rightly boasted about Arsenal’s plethora of attacking options following the thrashing of Southampton on Saturday but in the first half at Emirates Stadium he witnessed his side fail to muster a shot on target for the third league game this season. The likes of Alexis Sanchez and Mesut Ozil were back in the team, but struggled against Watford’s organised, solid defence which was even better protected by their midfield lynchpin Etienne Capoue. 

In-form striker Olivier Giroud was another returnee to the starting XI who had a minimal impact and it’s ironic that he recently demanded his team-mates to be “stronger at the beginning of games because I'm not going to score goals in the last minute every week”. That advice clearly fell on deaf ears as the Gunners were stunned by Walter Mazzarri’s sucker-punches from Younes Kaboul and Troy Deeney.

Perhaps more worryingly is the inevitability of Arsenal’s annual injury crisis which seems to have taken its place just as everyone except Santi Cazorla was deemed fully fit.

Aaron Ramsey was forced off with an all-too familiar muscular problem in the first half and his replacement Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain appeared to limp for periods of the second half. Wenger’s side are without Mohamed Elneny, who is at the African Cup of Nations, the aforementioned Cazorla and much-needed Jack Wilshere, who is flourishing in Bournemouth’s midfield during his season-long loan deal.

From potentially closing the gap on Chelsea ahead of Saturday’s game to looking dead and buried in the title race, the problems now appear to be mounting up for a manager who still has two games left of his touchline ban to serve in the Premier League.

For Arsenal and their players it must feel like de ja vu - a title challenge slipping away before it’s even begun.

Shiite militias open offices in Iraq's liberated Sunni areas

Shiite fighters ride on the back of a truck with their weapons in al-Fatha, Iraq, Oct. 18, 2015. (photo by REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudan)

BAGHDAD — After the liberation of Sunni areas from the clutches of the Islamic State (IS), Shiite parties and their affiliated armed factions have established offices in those areas, despite not having a popular base there.

The Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) opened a bureau in the city of Fallujah on Jan. 16. Sunni journalists have expressed concern about this development, commenting that the PMU is trying to “a get a foothold in the liberated Sunni areas.”

Some media commentators are highly alarmed, warning that this step is a prelude to annihilating the Sunni identity. Jamila al-Obaidi, a parliament member for the National Iraqi Alliance, told Al-Monitor, “The PMU offices in the Sunni areas arepolitically motivated. It is an attempt to gain popularity in such areas in order to draw a new policy in the country in line with the aspirations of the [Shiite] parties in the liberated areas.”

In the Fallujah district, which was liberated a few months ago from IS, the PMU-affiliated armed factions are interfering in the work of the security forces stationed there, sometimes contravening the policies and efforts of the local police.

Mohammed al-Alwani, a citizen of Fallujah in Anbar governorate, was surprised to see the picture of a Shiite cleric hung on a wall near the office of an armed Shiite faction. “I don’t have any problem with Shiites as a community. They are my brethren. However, I do have a problem with their politics. I don’t know what the motives are behind these bureaus, which don’t have any supporters or followers in our city,” Alwani told Al-Monitor.

Some believe that Iran is seeking to expandits influence from the Shiite areas to Sunni ones through the PMU, gaining a foothold in more Iraqi cities as part of the rise of thepolitical Shiite tide.

PMU spokesman Youssef al-Kilabi told Al-Monitor, “The opening of the resistance factions’ bureaus in the Sunni areas has nothing to do with the concept of political Shiism. The PMU is an official, lawful institution that represents all Iraqis. It is also a military institution as legitimate as the army, whose vision is not different from that of the government. The PMU was established to fight terrorism.”

He continued, “The majority of the PMU factions had a political presence before the establishment of the institution. They have the right to engage in political activity, but apart from the PMU and according to the law regulating political parties. We will not allow the establishment of militia bureaus in the Sunni areas, and we are working on distributing tasks according to the appropriate powers.”

On Dec. 21, 2016, some local police sources revealed to reporters on condition of anonymity that some PMU factions, including Hezbollah, the Badr Organization and the Ali al-Akbar Brigade, planned to open three official bureaus in the liberated districts of Ramadi and Fallujah, affiliated with Anbar governorate.

Salem al-Issawi, a member of parliament for Anbar, told Al-Monitor, “The existence of armed factions’ bureaus in the Sunni areas is a provocation and a politically motivated step that would benefit no one.” He added, “I do not know what the purpose is of opening bureaus for political parties that do not have wide popular bases in the Sunni areas. All this could aggravate the security and social situation in the Sunni areas.”

Despite the Sunni residents’ dissatisfaction with these bureaus, some local residents revealed to Fath News that they are being established according to the wishes ofsome tribal leaders and dignitaries who requested a PMU presence in the Sunni areas to help maintain security.

The PMU has already established at least 10 offices in the past few months in Ramadi, Fallujah, Saqlawiyah, Ratba and Haditha.

In the cities of Tarmiyah and Taji, north of Baghdad, the PMU factions opened bureaus ostensibly to maintain security in the areas that were liberated by these forces. The moves suggest that more bureaus will open in other areas where the PMU took part in the liberation operations.

According to Issawi, all this could further escalate tension in these areas, though some believe that the PMU is a lawful official institution that has the right to be present where it deems appropriate. It could be a risky venture for armed factions that were once accused of committinghuman rights violations and of being affiliated with Iran to build a presence in Sunni areas. However, their presence may be justified by local forces' inability to protect the lands and maintain security.

Preserving security in the liberated Sunni areas will not be easy. While the locals are demanding that their own forces take care of security, the PMU is insisting on extending its influence and taking control of the situation. These new offices could themselves be attacked or boycotted by Sunni locals, destabilizing the areas rather than securing them.

US-supplied armoured vehicles reach Syrian rebels for first time

Fighters from the Kurdish-Arab alliance known as the Syrian Democratic Forces sitting on a heavily armed vehicle near the village of Khirbet Al Jahshe, some 35 kilometres from Al Tabaqah on the western outskirts of Raqqa in December.The coalition has now received US armoured vehicles for the first time, and a promise of new US support. / AFP / DELIL SOULEIMAN

BEIRUT // The United States has for the first time supplied armoured vehicles to the Arab faction of a coalition fighting ISIL in Syria, a US defence official said on Tuesday.

Though the supply came under the administration of President Donald Trump, it was allowed by rules first enacted by his predecessor Barack Obama.

"We have provided armoured Sport Utility Vehicles to the Syrian Arab Coalition using existing authorities, in the interest of helping protect our partnered force from the [ISIL] improvised-explosive device threat," said US military spokesman Colonel John Dorrian.

The Syrian Arab Coalition is the Arab component of the Syrian Democratic Forces, a coalition of Kurdish and Arab fighters.

The vehicles arrived with a promise of new American support, SDF spokesman Talal Sello said on Tuesday.

"Before we used to receive light weapons, ammunition ... with these armoured vehicles we’ve entered a new phase in the [US] support. It’s a sign," he said.

"We have had meetings with representatives of the new administration, and they promised us extra support."

The SDF has long been a key partner of the US-led coalition fighting ISIL in Syria and Iraq, and Washington has previously supplied them with light weaponry and sent US and other Western special forces as "advisers".

The US-led coalition has also backed the force with heavy air strikes targeting ISIL fighters.

The alliance has caused tensions between Washington and ally Turkey, which considers the main component of the SDF — the Kurdish YPG force — to be a terrorist organisation.

The SDF has been battling since November 5 to oust the extremists from the city of Raqqa, the group’s main stronghold in Syria.

Mr Sello said the Trump administration had pledged extra support "particularly in the fight for Raqqa". He said the decision to supply the vehicles was taken by Mr Trump’s administration, rather than in a simple continuation of US support under Mr Obama.

In a two-month offensive, the SDF has taken large areas of northern Raqqa province.

The first two phases of the offensive focused on capturing areas to the north and west of Raqqa, part of a strategy to encircle the city.

The third phase would focus on capturing remaining areas, including the road between Raqqa city and Deir Ezzour, a Kurdish military source said.

ISIL holds nearly all of Deir Ezzour province, where it has been fighting hard in recent weeks to try to capture the last remaining pockets of Syrian government-held territory in Deir Ezzour city.

Cutting off Raqqa city from ISIL strongholds in Deir Ezzour would be a major blow against the group.

"The coming phase of the campaign aims to isolate Raqqa completely," said the Kurdish military source. "Accomplishing this requires reaching the Raqqa-Deir Ezzour road. This mission will be difficult."

The SDF alliance was formed in October 2015, after the YPG Kurdish militia had already scored a string of victories against ISIL in northern Syria with air support from the US-led coalition.

Trump has said his focus in Syria will be battling ISIL, and on Saturday signed an executive order giving the US military 30 days to devise a plan to "defeat" the group.

The order, which called for a "comprehensive strategy and plans for the defeat of ISIL", was seen as meaning more US forces and military hardware moving into Iraq and Syria.

Silo of the SDF said preparations were underway for "new action" against ISIL starting in "a few days", but declined to give further details.

*Agence France-Presse and Reuters

Germany Sends Tanks to Lithuania for NATO Mission

GRAFENWOEHR, Germany — Germany began sending tanks and other equipment to Lithuania on Tuesday as part of a NATO mission to beef up the defense of eastern Europe and send a signal of resolve to Russia, which has denounced the build-up as an act of aggression.

The German army command said it was sending about 200 vehicles, including 30 tanks, by train to Lithuania along with 450 troops, the first of whom arrived last week. The transports would continue until late February.

Seven decades after the end of World War Two, the movement of German troops to eastern Europe, even on a NATO mission, remains a sensitive issue both in Germany and the region.

On Monday the U.S. military deployed thousands of soldiers and heavy weaponry to Poland, the Baltic states and southeastern Europe in its biggest build-up since the Cold War.

The movements are part of a strategy agreed by NATO leaders last July to reassure member states that were once part of the Soviet bloc and have been alarmed by Russia's seizure of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine in 2014.

The 28-nation Western alliance decided to move four battalions totaling 3,000 to 4,000 troops into northeastern Europe on a rotating basis to display its readiness to defend eastern members against any Russian aggression.

The deployments focus on Poland and the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which fear Moscow could try to destabilize them by cyber attacks, territorial incursions or other means.

Russia denies such intentions and has described NATO's behavior as aggressive and threatening.

In early January, hundreds of U.S. tanks, trucks and other military equipment arrived by ship in Germany to be transported by rail and road to eastern Europe for use by U.S. troops being deployed under the NATO plan.

‘Moscow will get the message’: US flexes muscles with largest ever deployment to Poland

Soldiers fire an M1A2 battle tank during the first accuracy test in Swietozow, Poland, Jan. 16, 2017, as part of an exercise to promote European security.Army photo by Staff Sgt. Micah VanDyke

In January, a US Army brigade of nearly 3,500 troops and 2,700 pieces of heavy equipment arrived in Poland in the largest deployments of US troops and armor to that country.

The brigade came with a simple mission - integrate with the Polish army and deter Russia on all fronts.

"Russian aggression takes many forms," Gen. Ben Hodges, commander of the US Army in Europe, told NBC News.

"Cyber, misinformation, threatening other countries, Russian snap exercises. We're serious - this is not just a training exercise. It's to demonstrate a strategic message that you cannot violate the sovereignty of members of NATO ... Moscow will get the message - I'm confident of it. "

The combine US and Polish forces immediately started training with tanks, artillery, and helicopters in an overt show of force.

Meanwhile, US soldiers in Lithuania had just finished a similar exercise. Estonia, Latvia, Romania, Bulgaria and Hungary will all also see US troops deployed on a rotational basis.

But the US assurance to vulnerable NATO states in the Baltics comes after a years-long Russian military buildup. Current and former US generals have expressed doubts about NATO's ability to deter or stop an outright attack from Russia, and a reportfrom the think tank RAND Corp predicts that Russia could seize control of the Baltic States within 36 hours of a blitz-like invasion.

However, experts around the world havenoted Russian aggression via softer hybrid means like cyberattacks and misinformation campaigns could also be used against NATO nations in Eastern Europe.

Additionally, Donald Trump has criticized NATO as being ineffectual and obsolete, sowing doubts among European leaders of whether or not the US would come to the aid of embattled European allies.

For now, US forces will train, eat, and sleep alongside their European allies, meaning that a Russian attack of any sort on the Baltics will draw an immediate reaction from the US.

U.S. Army tanks being moved to Russian border

Jan. 31 (UPI) -- The U.S. Army will send M1A2 Abrams main battle tanks to the Baltic states of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania along Russia's borders ahead of a NATO operation in the spring.

The tanks participated in joint drills between U.S. and Polish forces but some are being moved to the Baltic states to await a deterrence operation set to reassure the United States' European allies that Washington, D.C., is committed to their defense, The Wall Street Journal reported.

German troops are also arriving in Lithuania, British troops are reinforcing positions in Estonia and Canadian troops are being sent to Latvia.

The United States deployed 87 tanks, 144 armored vehicles and 3,500 troops -- the biggest U.S. deployment in Europe since the end of the Cold War -- to perform regional operations through most of 2017 to combat Russian aggression, the Pentagon said. Another unit will replace the brigade that's currently deployed in Europe in October.

"This is the largest ever U.S. deployment in Poland and it's about deterrence," U.S. Army in Europe commander Gen. Ben Hodges told NBC News. "An outright attack by Russia is unlikely, but the best way to keep it unlikely is to do what we're doing here today."

The United States did not have a single tank in Europe prior to Russian President Vladimir Putin's annexation of Crimea in 2014.

"Let me be very clear, this is one part of our efforts to deter Russian aggression, ensure territorial integrity of our allies and maintain a Europe that is whole, free, prosperous and at peace," U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. Tim Ray, deputy commander of U.S. European Command, previously said of the NATO operation.

Steven N'Zonzi ends transfer speculation by signing new deal at Sevilla until 2020

Steven N'Zonzi ends transfer speculation by signing new deal at Sevilla until 2020

Spaniard have raised his release clause which was set £25.8m to ward off potential suitors.

Barcelona, Chelsea, Manchester City, Arsenal and Everton had been linked with his services.

Steven N'Zonzi joined Sevilla from Stoke City in 2015

Steven N'Zonzi has put an end to the speculations linking him with a move away from Sevilla by signing a new deal at the Europe League winners until 2020. Barcelona, Chelsea, Manchester City, Arsenal and Everton have been linked with his services in recent times but the Andalucian outfit announce that the new contract have raise his release clause to ward off potential suitors.

Sevilla signed N'Zonzi from Stoke City in the summer of 2015 for only £7m (€8.2m, $8.7m). The 28-year-old has since garnered a reputation as one of the best players around in his position, helping his side conquer the Europe League in his first season at the club while playing a crucial role in their impressive start to the current campaign – coming third in the La Liga table, just behind Real Madrid and Barcelona.

The Andalucian club have been in negotiations with the player since the summer in order to reward him for his performances but also to increase his release clause, which was then set at €30m (£25.8m).

Earlier this month, The Sun reported the former Stoke City star had turned down the offer made by Sevilla as he was likely to leave, with Chelsea and Manchester City being front runners to secure his services.

But N'Zonzi himself appeared to play down those links during a recent interview withFour Four Two, where he insisted he was happy at Sevilla.

"The Barcelona interest is flattering, but it's only in the papers. I don't even think about it as I'm happy at Sevilla. It's something you get used to – until something actually happens, then it isn't really worth thinking about. But to be linked with clubs is a sign that I'm playing pretty well, so that's nice," N'Zonzi said. "I don't miss the Premier League. I love it here. It feels like the whole city is behind the team. We feel so tough to beat at home because the fans are incredible. The players can feel it. They are extremely passionate."

The Frenchman has now fulfilled those words after committing his future to Jorge Sampaoli's side by putting pen to paper on a new deal, while increasing his former €30m release clause to an undetermined new figure.

"Steven Nzonzi has renewed his contract with Sevilla FC, extending his tie with the Nervion club for another season, until June 30 2020, and increasing his release clause," the La Liga side have confirmed.

"With this renewal the club recognises the exceptional performance of the French midfielder, undoubtedly one of the most outstanding players in the current season, both in Spain and in Europe."

Player pictured in club shirt after arriving to complete Chelsea transfer

CHELSEA defender Branislav Ivanovic has been pictured in a Zenit St Petersburg shirt ahead of his move to Russia.

Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic has been pictured in a Zenit St Petersburg shirt

Ivanovic has been in talks over a move away from Stamford Bridge this month. 

The 32-year-old is being allowed to leaveChelsea on a free transfer after struggling for game time this season. 

He was left out of Chelsea's squad for tonight's clash with Liverpool as he flew to Russia to complete his move

And the defender has now been pictured in a Zenit shirt, with the deal set to be announced imminently. 

The Serbia international, who joined Chelsea in 2008, has fallen down the pecking order since Antonio Conte swapped to a 3-4-3 formation. 

The defender hasn’t started a Premier League game since the 3-0 defeat to Arsenal in September.

Since joining the Blues, Ivanovic has made 376 appearances, scoring 34 goals.

Ivanovic will join the Russian club on a free transfer and has agreed a two-and-a-half year deal. 

Real Madrid striker rejects deadline day move to Liverpool

REAL MADRID striker Mariano has reportedly rejected an offer to join Liverpool.

Real Madrid striker Mariano does not want to leave the club

Real Madrid want to offload Mariano, 23, before the Spanish transfer deadline shuts this afternoon.

La Liga side Alaves are keen to sign the forward, while Spanish newspaper Eco Diario claim Liverpool are also interested.

But Dominican Republic international Mariano has refused to leave the Bernabeu.

According to the report, not even Liverpool's interest could entice the Real youth player from quitting Madrid.

Mariano has scored five goals in nine appearances for Real this season but is a long way off securing regular first-team football under manager Zinedine Zidane.

Liverpool and Alaves are said to be interested in Real Madrid's Mariano

Zidane is happy with his strikeforce of Gareth Bale, Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema, while the boss has James Rodriguez and Alvaro Morata to call upon ahead of Mariano.

It is added that Mariano refused to join a host of clubs including Porto, Villarreal or Leganes last summer.

Chelsea transfer shock: Winger wants big-money China move on deadline day

JONATHAN BIABIANY has turned down a loan move to Chelsea in favour of a move to China, according to reports.

Jonathan Biabiany did not think he would be part of Chelsea's long-term plans

Jonathan Biabiany joined Inter Milan in 2015 from Parma but he has since fallen down the pecking order at the San Siro.

The 28-year-old has made just three Europa League appearances for Inter this term.

And Chelsea had reportedly made a loan bid to take the winger to Stamford Bridge for the remainder of the season.

Jonathan Biabiany has made just three appearances for Inter Milan this season

However, according to Sky Sports Italia, Biabiany has rejected the opportunity to join the Blues.

The report says Inter were not standing in the way of the Frenchman but he did not want to go on loan.

He is said to have concerns about his role in the team and did not feel he would be part of Antonio Conte's plans.

And he will instead seek a big-money move to the Chinese Super League.

Biabiany is renowned for his pace and plays predominantly on the right wing or right side of midfield.

He is under contract with Inter until June 2019 and has made 49 appearances for the club in all competitions, scoring just two goals.

Hope for Arsenal? Borussia Dortmund's star forward confirms he's leaving

Long-term Arsenal target Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang has confirmed his intention to leave Borussia Dortmund this summer and appeared to give the Gunners encouragement by suggesting there has been ‘too much noise’ concerning a potential move to Real Madrid.

'He might join Arsenal' - World-class manager tipped to replace Arsene Wenger

The Gabon international has been in scintillating form this season, scoring 21 goals in 24 appearances for the Bundesliga club, having opted to remain with Thomas Tuchel’s side in the summer despite interest from a number of Premier League giants, including the likes of Manchester City.

The 27-year-old has spoken previously of his dream to one day represent Real Madrid and reiterated that desire on Tuesday, but hinted a move to the Spanish capital this summer is by no means a forgone conclusion.

He told RMC: ‘If I want to go to the next level, I need to leave in summer. Real Madrid is still a dream, but there has been too much noise.’

Arsenal were reported to have shown an interest in the pacy striker before his move to Dortmund fro St Etienne four years ago, since when he has scored 70 goals in 96 Bundesliga appearances.

Arsene Wenger’s side are already making contingency plans should Alexis Sanchez refuse to sign an extension to the deal which expires in the summer of 2018 and are reported to have already opened negotiations with Aubameyang’s teammate Marco Reus.

Real Madrid Done Deal: Midfielder agrees transfer just hours before deadline

REAL MADRID have confirmed midfielder Lucas Silva has gone on loan to his former club Cruzeiro Esporte Clube - just hours before the Spanish transfer deadline.

Lucas Silva has left Real Madrid on loan

Real Madrid cannot sign players during the January transfer window due to a FIFA-imposed ban.

But they can still offloaded unwanted talent.

Silva, 23, has moved back to Brazilian side Cruzeiro on loan until the end of the season.

The Brazilian last played for Real in April 2015 and spent last season on loan at Ligue 1 side Marseille.

He moves back to his home country two years after arriving at Real from Cruzeiro.

He cost Real an estimated £9.7million.

Real could still make more deals before the Spanish transfer deadline.

La Liga clubs have until 10pm UK time to get their business in order.

The Rohingya Alan Kurdi': Will the world take notice now?

Face down in the mud, a baby boy lies still after washing up on a river bank.

His name is Mohammed Shohayet, a 16-month-old Rohingya refugee whose family fled their home for Bangladesh to escape the violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State, only to drown during the journey along with his mother, uncle and three-year-old brother.

"When I see the picture, I feel like I would rather die," Mohammed's father, Zafor Alam, told CNN. "There is no point in me living in this world."

The image has parallels with that of theyoung Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi , who was found dead on a Turkish beach in September 2015, after trying to flee the civil war at home.

The conflicts the two boys left behind are different, but the desperation of their families to escape is all too familiar.

Myanmar's Muslim Rohingyas are considered one of the world's most persecuted minorities. The Myanmar government views them as Bengali immigrants, despite the fact that they've lived for generations in Myanmar's Rakhine State.

"In our village, helicopters fired guns at us, and the Myanmar soldiers also opened fire on us," said Alam. "We couldn't stay in our house. We fled and went into hiding in the jungle."

"My grandfather and grandmother were burnt to death," he added. "Our whole village was burnt by the military. Nothing left."

'The military was searching for Rohingyas'

Zafor Alam said they ran from village to village trying to escape the violence.

"I walked for six days. I couldn't eat rice for four days. I could not sleep at all for six days," he said. "We constantly changed our location as the military was searching for Rohingyas."

Alam became separated from his family during the journey and made it to the Naf River which runs between Myanmar and Bangladesh. He says he began swimming and was picked up by Bangladeshi fishermen who took him across the border.

Then, he says he started the process to get his family across to safety.

"I contacted a boatman and asked him to help my wife and sons so that they could cross the river. They were waiting on the other side," Alam said.

"I called (my family) on December 4. They were very desperate to leave Myanmar," Alam said. "They were the last words I had with my family. When I was talking to my wife over phone, I could hear my youngest son calling 'Abba-Abba' (father-father)."

Just a few hours after that phone call, Alam said his family tried to make their escape.

"When the Myanmar police got a sense that people were preparing to cross the river, they opened fire," Alam said. "Hurriedly, the boatman took all people on board to escape the firing. The boat became overloaded. Then it sank."

A day later, on December 5, he learned what happened.

"Someone phoned me and said my son's dead body was found," Alam said. "He took a photo of my son by mobile phone and sent it to me. I was speechless."

"It's very difficult for me to talk about my son. He was very fond of his father," he added. "My son was very affectionate. In our village, everyone used to love him."

'Only the river knows'

Alam's story of his family being torn apart trying to escape is one familiar to many Rohingya families who have made it across the border to Bangladesh. The International Organization for Migration says some 34,000 people have crossed the border in recent weeks and months.

"Only the river knows how many dead bodies of Rohingyas are floating there," Alam said.

Now at the Leda refugee camp in Teknaf, southern Bangladesh, Alam is struggling to come to terms with what happened.

"I have no one left. My two sons and my wife died. All are finished," he said.

"We are also suffering here in Bangladesh. There is no house here to live in. There is no food. People who have been living in the camp for a long time, they have given us shelter."

But at least, it's a respite from the violence.

"We used to live in constant fear of losing our lives in Myanmar," he said. "We don't have any fear in Bangladesh."

CNN is unable to independently verify Zafor Alam's account, as access to northern Rakhine State is still heavily restricted.

In a written response to CNN, Aye Aye Soe, Myanmar government spokesperson, called the testimony "propaganda" and "false."

She did confirm that Myanmar military helicopters fired on a Rohingya village on November 12, but said this was a rescue mission aimed at dispersing an "armed mob of suspected perpetrators and collaborating villagers" who ambushed Myanmar troops.

The Myanmar government has repeatedlydenied claims of human rights abuses , saying they are only carrying out "clearance operations" against suspects involved in an attack on Myanmar border guards on October 9.

This week, the government made a rare announcement that it would investigate police brutality after a video emerged showing officers beating Rohingya villagers.

'Nothing has changed'

In September, the government set up the Rakhine Commission, led by Kofi Annan, to look into problems in the region.

Zafor Alam said that the commission is a smokescreen.

"The commission has been formed to deceive the whole world," he said. "The military drives people out of the villages when the commission visits the area."

"When the elections took place in Myanmar, I thought as Aung San Suu Kyi won, it would be beneficial for us," Alam said. "But the dream and the reality is completely different. Since she assumed power, nothing has changed. We are still being persecuted."

"Aung San Suu Kyi and the military want to eliminate Rohingyas from Rakhine State. She is denying the atrocities committed by the military," he said.

Amnesty International has released a lengthy report which says the "systematic campaign of violence" against the Rohingya people "may amount to crimes against humanity." Aye Aye Soe told CNN these claims are "unsubstantiated."

Myanmar state counselor Aung San Suu Kyi held a meeting with foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Yangon this month to discuss the situation.

Aung San Suu Kyi told the ministers that the government is committed to resolving the issues in Rakhine State, but said that "time and space are critical for the efforts to bear fruit," according to state newspaper The Global New Light of Myanmar

But Zafor Alam said allowing the government more "time and space" will only end in more bloodshed.

"I want to let the whole world know," he said. "The Myanmar government should not be given any more time.

If you take time to take action, they will kill all Rohingyas."

The Rohingya Alan Kurdi': Will the world take notice now?

Face down in the mud, a baby boy lies still after washing up on a river bank.

His name is Mohammed Shohayet, a 16-month-old Rohingya refugee whose family fled their home for Bangladesh to escape the violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State, only to drown during the journey along with his mother, uncle and three-year-old brother.

"When I see the picture, I feel like I would rather die," Mohammed's father, Zafor Alam, told CNN. "There is no point in me living in this world."

The image has parallels with that of theyoung Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi , who was found dead on a Turkish beach in September 2015, after trying to flee the civil war at home.

The conflicts the two boys left behind are different, but the desperation of their families to escape is all too familiar.

Myanmar's Muslim Rohingyas are considered one of the world's most persecuted minorities. The Myanmar government views them as Bengali immigrants, despite the fact that they've lived for generations in Myanmar's Rakhine State.

"In our village, helicopters fired guns at us, and the Myanmar soldiers also opened fire on us," said Alam. "We couldn't stay in our house. We fled and went into hiding in the jungle."

"My grandfather and grandmother were burnt to death," he added. "Our whole village was burnt by the military. Nothing left."

'The military was searching for Rohingyas'

Zafor Alam said they ran from village to village trying to escape the violence.

"I walked for six days. I couldn't eat rice for four days. I could not sleep at all for six days," he said. "We constantly changed our location as the military was searching for Rohingyas."

Alam became separated from his family during the journey and made it to the Naf River which runs between Myanmar and Bangladesh. He says he began swimming and was picked up by Bangladeshi fishermen who took him across the border.

Then, he says he started the process to get his family across to safety.

"I contacted a boatman and asked him to help my wife and sons so that they could cross the river. They were waiting on the other side," Alam said.

"I called (my family) on December 4. They were very desperate to leave Myanmar," Alam said. "They were the last words I had with my family. When I was talking to my wife over phone, I could hear my youngest son calling 'Abba-Abba' (father-father)."

Just a few hours after that phone call, Alam said his family tried to make their escape.

"When the Myanmar police got a sense that people were preparing to cross the river, they opened fire," Alam said. "Hurriedly, the boatman took all people on board to escape the firing. The boat became overloaded. Then it sank."

A day later, on December 5, he learned what happened.

"Someone phoned me and said my son's dead body was found," Alam said. "He took a photo of my son by mobile phone and sent it to me. I was speechless."

"It's very difficult for me to talk about my son. He was very fond of his father," he added. "My son was very affectionate. In our village, everyone used to love him."

'Only the river knows'

Alam's story of his family being torn apart trying to escape is one familiar to many Rohingya families who have made it across the border to Bangladesh. The International Organization for Migration says some 34,000 people have crossed the border in recent weeks and months.

"Only the river knows how many dead bodies of Rohingyas are floating there," Alam said.

Now at the Leda refugee camp in Teknaf, southern Bangladesh, Alam is struggling to come to terms with what happened.

"I have no one left. My two sons and my wife died. All are finished," he said.

"We are also suffering here in Bangladesh. There is no house here to live in. There is no food. People who have been living in the camp for a long time, they have given us shelter."

But at least, it's a respite from the violence.

"We used to live in constant fear of losing our lives in Myanmar," he said. "We don't have any fear in Bangladesh."

CNN is unable to independently verify Zafor Alam's account, as access to northern Rakhine State is still heavily restricted.

In a written response to CNN, Aye Aye Soe, Myanmar government spokesperson, called the testimony "propaganda" and "false."

She did confirm that Myanmar military helicopters fired on a Rohingya village on November 12, but said this was a rescue mission aimed at dispersing an "armed mob of suspected perpetrators and collaborating villagers" who ambushed Myanmar troops.

The Myanmar government has repeatedlydenied claims of human rights abuses , saying they are only carrying out "clearance operations" against suspects involved in an attack on Myanmar border guards on October 9.

This week, the government made a rare announcement that it would investigate police brutality after a video emerged showing officers beating Rohingya villagers.

'Nothing has changed'

In September, the government set up the Rakhine Commission, led by Kofi Annan, to look into problems in the region.

Zafor Alam said that the commission is a smokescreen.

"The commission has been formed to deceive the whole world," he said. "The military drives people out of the villages when the commission visits the area."

"When the elections took place in Myanmar, I thought as Aung San Suu Kyi won, it would be beneficial for us," Alam said. "But the dream and the reality is completely different. Since she assumed power, nothing has changed. We are still being persecuted."

"Aung San Suu Kyi and the military want to eliminate Rohingyas from Rakhine State. She is denying the atrocities committed by the military," he said.

Amnesty International has released a lengthy report which says the "systematic campaign of violence" against the Rohingya people "may amount to crimes against humanity." Aye Aye Soe told CNN these claims are "unsubstantiated."

Myanmar state counselor Aung San Suu Kyi held a meeting with foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Yangon this month to discuss the situation.

Aung San Suu Kyi told the ministers that the government is committed to resolving the issues in Rakhine State, but said that "time and space are critical for the efforts to bear fruit," according to state newspaper The Global New Light of Myanmar

But Zafor Alam said allowing the government more "time and space" will only end in more bloodshed.

"I want to let the whole world know," he said. "The Myanmar government should not be given any more time.

If you take time to take action, they will kill all Rohingyas."

Zlatan Ibrahimovic the showman Man United wanted but questions remain

ESPN FC's Craig Burley discusses Zlatan Ibrahimovic's importance to Manchester United.

"I came like a king, left like a legend," was Zlatan Ibrahimovic's description of his four years as Paris Saint-Germain's main man. The plan was the same for Manchester United.

So far, so good? It is all but guaranteed Ibrahmovic will be United's starting striker on Wednesday night against Hull City. Barring injury, he will play the full 90 minutes, just as in each of his 31 previous matches. A goal is also likely; he has struck 19 so far, his 14 Premier League strikes making him the top division's second-top scorer behind Arsenal's Alexis Sanchez and Chelsea's Diego Costa on 15.

For years, United's commercial department craved a marketable icon and Ibrahimovic, signed as a free agent after leaving PSG last summer, was its dream come true. On Instagram, Paul Pogba trails in the wake of the Swede's 22.3 million followers by an almighty 10.1 million. Last week, almost 2.4 million people watched an uneventful clip of Ibrahimovic in sponsor-endorsed winter woollies at United's Aon Training Complex. 

Ibrahimovic has been the short-term fix that has worked for all parties, save for Wayne Rooney, yesterday's man at 31 as compared to Ibrahimovic's 35. Relevance faded, benched and having now become the club's all-time leading scorer, Rooney's days are now numbered. Should a suitable berth be found, be that in China, the United States or even back at Everton, then United will surely not stand in his way.

By turning to the striker he previously worked with at Inter Milan in 2009, parachuting in a player whose beyond-confident personality make him the dominant dressing-room figure, Jose Mourinho weaned the club off Rooney, whose decline was poorly managed by both David Moyes and Louis van Gaal. But how long should Ibrahimovic be kept around?

Are United too reliant on a player with a strictly limited shelf life, despite Michael Andersson, his mentor as a youth at Malmo, suggesting this month he can be still be a star in his 40s?

Zlatan Ibrahimovic has scored 19 goals in 31 appearances in all competitions so far this season.

Last week, in his interview with the BBC, Sir Alex Ferguson suggested United would be competing at the top of the table with Chelsea if they had been able to turn more of their eight drawn matches into victories. The chief reason for that is United's paltry Premier League goals tally of 33, 10 fewer than Manchester City, the second-lowest scorers within the top six. 

There, Ibrahimovic shoulders significant blame. October's 0-0 home draw with Burnley, the sole point Sean Dyche's team have collected away from Turf Moor, was sealed by a clumsy last-second miss from the Swede. The Premier League's official statisticians suggest "Ibra" has missed more "big chances" than any other player -- 12, significantly ahead of second-placed Benik Afobe's eight for Bournemouth. On 90, he has also taken the most shots of any player. 

When United were on an autumnal run of one win in eight Premier League matches, a slump that still keeps them back in sixth, Ibrahimovic went seven matches without scoring. Mourinho's style of play, centred around his 6-foot-5 target man, was blunted. The situation was rectified by some adjustments in midfield. Michael Carrick and Henrikh Mkhitaryan were introduced and United won nine matches in succession, but one-dimensional tactics were in evidence during the 1-1 draws with both Liverpool and Stoke, and last week's 2-1 EFL Cup semifinal second leg loss at Hull.

Beyond Ibrahimovic, United's next highest scorers in the Premier League are Pogba and Juan Mata on four each. Anthony Martial and Marcus Rashford, last year's breakout stars, have scored two and three respectively. Pushed to the wings, they are starved of opportunities in the central position from which both have delivered match-winning performances.

They are working alongside one of the best strikers of the 21st Century, whose devotional attitude to physical conditioning should provide a long term example. But there is short term pain for both, not least that their jet-propelled runs down the flanks are less useful when the target for their crosses or through balls is markedly slower, and often dropping deeper into midfield.

Similar goes for Pogba, whose instinct to charge beyond the main striker from midfield has been curbed. If Antoine Griezmann arrives from Atletico Madrid this summer, as widely speculated, the Frenchman would add zip to United's somewhat slow-coach attack, but would he be in tandem with Ibrahimovic?

The possibility of an extension to a one-year deal was mentioned publicly in November by both player and manager but little has been mentioned since. Both parties have further options to hand.

Like Rooney, lucrative moves to China and America could yet tempt Ibrahimovic, having successfully quietened those who doubted he could cut it in England.

And even if he probably left it too late to become a United legend, a true showman always leave his audience wanting more.

Man United boss Jose Mourinho reveals team news: Decision made on Bailly after injury

MANCHESTER UNITED boss Jose Mourinho has confirmed Eric Bailly is fit to face Hull.

The central defender has returned to the club last week following his participation at the Africa Cup of Nations with the Ivory Coast.

But he limped out of a under-23s clash against Everton in the 58th minute yesterday after suffering a knock to his ankle.

Manchester United released a statement saying the injury was "nothing serious".

And in his pre-match press conference today, Mourinho revealed Bailly will be in the squad to play Hull.

Man United defender Eric Bailly

Mourinho also confirmed Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Paul Pogba and Antonio Valencia will return to the starting XI after being rested.

He said: "Some players who didn't play the last match – like Valencia, Ibra, Pogba – will play tomorrow."

Wayne Rooney: Man Utd striker's Old Trafford future uncertain

Wayne Rooney is sixth on Manchester United's list of all-time appearances with 548

Could Manchester United captain Wayne Rooney accept a lucrative offer to play in China?

The 31-year-old forward's Old Trafford future is the subject of intense debate.

Rooney broke United's goalscoring record at Stoke on 21 January and made his 28th appearance of the season in their FA Cup fourth-round win over Wigan on Sunday.

But the England captain - also his country's record goalscorer - is the subject of serious interest from the Chinese Super League.

BBC Sport looks at why Rooney's future is so uncertain.

Eased out at United?

Of United's outfield players, only Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Paul Pogba have featured more often than Rooney in all competitions this season.

Yet the 31-year-old's eight Premier League starts are fewer than Juan Mata, Jesse Lingard and Anthony Martial, the same as Marcus Rashford and only one more than summer signing Henrikh Mkhitaryan, who made only his second league start at Everton on 4 December.

Manager Jose Mourinho has said he does not view Rooney as a midfielder, where he had been used so often by former manager Louis van Gaal, but as a "9 or a 10 or a 9 and a half".

However, the signing of Ibrahimovic effectively blocked off the main striker's role. Especially since the Swede has 18 goals to his name in just 30 appearances.

The relative lack of Premier League starts has led to speculation that Rooney, who joined United from Everton for £27m in 2004, is being eased out of Old Trafford by Mourinho.

Interest from China

It is understood Rooney is aware of significant interest from the Chinese Super League, who have spent vast sums on the likes of Carlos Tevez and Oscar recently. He knows the huge amounts that would be on offer to a player of his status as captain of both England and one of the world's biggest clubs.

In addition, his long-time adviser Paul Stretford has links with China through his'turn-key' Red Lantern digital media agency.

Although the Premier League transfer deadline is 11pm on Tuesday, the Chinese Super League remains open for transfer business until 28 February.

So, there is another month for Rooney to leave United for China and such a scenario has not been ruled out.

Mourinho, who turned down an offer from China himself, has said repeatedly he would not stand in the way of any player who wanted to leave Old Trafford and has also said he would not blame players for accepting the offer of a large Chinese contract, especially those coming towards the end of their careers.

Nevertheless, after selling Memphis Depay and Morgan Schneiderlin already this month and saying Ashley Young might leave, letting Rooney go without bringing anyone in would represent a risk given United are active in three cup competitions in addition to chasing a top-four place.

Manchester United press conference LIVE Jose Mourinho updates on transfer deadline day

This season is set to become the first in the post-Sir Alex Ferguson era thatManchester United have not made a signing on either transfer deadline day.

After Marouane Fellaini, Daley Blind, Radamel Falcao and Anthony Martial all arrived in Manchester belatedly, United's transfer window preparations are much more serene under Jose Mourinho and they seem to have their targets lined up for the summer.

That Mourinho is hosting a press conference today indicates what a quiet day United expected. Ashley Young, asM.E.N. Sport revealed on Friday, will see out his sixth season at the club despite strong interest from Premier League clubs.

"I always think the best time is the summer market," Mourinho recently said. "I always consider the January market as an emergency one where you can try to resolve some problems, where you can try to resolve some problems, where you can try to give a little boost to the team.

Mourinho will take questions from 1.30pm and updates will flow through from about 2pm.

Canada Shooting Suspect Rented Apartment Close to Quebec Mosque: Neighbors

QUEBEC CITY — The French-Canadian student accused of killing six people during evening prayers in a Quebec City mosque had rented an apartment nearby, neighbors said on Tuesday, a sign he may have been targeting the house of worship.

Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, was charged on Monday with six counts of first-degree murder and five counts of attempted murder with a restricted weapon after Sunday evening's massacre at the Centre Culturel Islamique de Québec. Police said he acted alone.

The mass shooting, which was rare for Canada and which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called a "terrorist attack," prompted an outpouring of support for the mosque and for the country's 1 million-strong Muslim community.

Authorities in Quebec have called for a spirit of inclusivity and police have tightened security at all religious institutions in the province.

Bissonnette, who said he was a fan of U.S. President Donald Trump and far-right French politician Marine Le Pen, had moved into an apartment in the beige block near the mosque in July and drove a Mitsubishi truck, said a neighbor, who asked not to be named.

Another neighbor on the fourth floor never spoke to Bissonnette but frequently heard him playing the piano. A neighbor of his parents told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp he had lived in the apartment with his twin brother.

Police declined to discuss a motive for the shooting, but friends and online acquaintances told Canadian media that Bissonnette had expressed anti-immigration sentiments, especially toward Muslim refugees.

Vigils were held in Quebec City, Montreal and other cities on Monday evening. The large turnout showed people rejected hate speech and wanted to be inclusive, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said.

"I think it's a turning point for Quebec, to see people rallying around values like that," he told reporters in Quebec City, the provincial capital, on Tuesday.

"Our society is not perfect. No society is perfect ... racism, xenophobia and exclusion exist here. We have to recognize that and act together to highlight the path we want society to take," Couillard said.

Bissonnette did not hide his hostility toward Muslims during his long interrogation by police, Montreal's La Presse newspaper said, quoting a source close to the investigation. He was also interested in guns, and practiced shooting at a local club near the provincial capital, La Presse reported.

Police have not released specific details of the weapon used in the attack, other than to say it was a restricted firearm.

A social science student and former cadet known in online circles for his right-wing views, Bissonnette was described by a former classmate as a "nerdy outcast."

Bissonnette made a brief appearance in court on Monday under tight security. Prosecutors said all of the evidence was not yet ready, and Bissonnette, a student at Université Laval, was set to appear again on Feb. 21. No charges were read in court and Bissonnette did not enter a plea.

His lawyer, Jean Petit, declined to comment at the courthouse on Monday.

SECURITY AT MOSQUES

Quebec's public safety minister, Martin Coiteux, said security at all religious institutions across the province had been heightened, particularly at mosques.

He added that while police always treated reports of religious harassment and hate speech seriously, they had not always done a good job of letting communities know the results of their probes.

"We will pay particular attention to feedback," he told Tuesday's news conference.

In Montreal, Quebec's largest city, police were increasing their presence at mosques and other Muslim institutions and watching for possible hate speech online.

"When you have an incident like the one in Quebec, people are worried ... we will maintain a very high level of vigilance," the city's police chief, Philippe Pichet, told French-language public broadcaster Radio-Canada.

Both law enforcement and intelligence agencies in the United States believe the suspect was sympathetic to right-wing nationalist ideology, and that this was likely a major factor in his motive for the attack, U.S. officials said.

On his Facebook page, Bissonnette indicated he liked Le Pen, Trump, the separatist Parti Quebecois, as well as Canada's left-wing New Democratic Party, the Israeli Defense Forces, heavy metal band Megadeth and pop star Katy Perry.

Of the five people critically wounded in Sunday's attack, one had been discharged from the hospital, two were convalescing, one was undergoing abdominal surgery and one was in "more critical" condition, Julien Clement, trauma director at Centre Hospitalier de l'Universite Laval, told reporters on Tuesday.

Oprah Winfrey joins CBS' '60 Minutes' as a special contributor

“I’ve been a big admirer of ‘60 Minutes’ since my days as a young reporter,” Oprah Winfrey said in a statement.

“I’ve been a big admirer of ‘60 Minutes’ since my days as a young reporter,” Oprah Winfrey said in a statement. (John Salangsang / Associated Press)

Oprah Winfrey is joining the CBS newsmagazine “60 Minutes” as a special contributor.

The talk show host, actress, cable network owner and producer will appear in several segments a year on the program starting this fall, CBS News announced Tuesday.

“I’ve been a big admirer of ‘60 Minutes’ since my days as a young reporter,” Winfrey said in a statement. “I’m so excited and proud to join forces with this historic news program, which for me represents the bastion of journalistic storytelling.”

It’s the first time in the program’s history that “60 Minutes” has had a special contributor. Winfrey is not a working journalist, which also will be a first for the show.

Winfrey will add some marquee value to “60 Minutes,” which has seen two of its signature correspondents — Bob Simon and Morley Safer — die in the past two years. In its 49th season, “60 Minutes” remains the top-rated news program on television, averaging 14 million viewers a week.

“60 Minutes” executive producer Jeff Fager said his program will not run spots from Weight Watchers, feature Winfrey as a spokesperson, in the weeks that she appears. The commercials have run on other CBS News programs. Winfrey is also on the board of directors of Weight Watchers.

It’s standard practice at serious TV news organizations that anchors and correspondents do not appear in commercials as product endorsers.

“Oprah is a dignified and discerning individual whose integrity is unquestioned,” Fager said in a statement. “Like everyone else who works with us on ‘60 Minutes,’ she would never do anything with even the appearance of a conflict.”

Winfrey has been building a relationship with CBS in recent years. She has made frequent appearances on “CBS This Morning,” where her best friend Gayle Kingis a co-anchor.

CBS also carried Winfrey’s hourlong interview with then-First Lady Michelle Obama in December. The interview aired on CBS before it ran on OWN, the Discovery Communications-owned cable network. Winfrey is chairman and chief executive of OWN.

Winfrey hosted the most successful syndicated talk show in history from 1986 to 2011. During that run, she founded her own production company, Harpo Productions, which developed other successful programs, including “Dr. Phil,” “The Dr. Oz Show” and “Rachael Ray.” She also has produced films including 2014’s “Selma,” in which she also had a featured role.

An addict wanted her story told. So her mother did — in an obituary.

Casey Schwartzmier (Courtesy of Schwartzmier family)

Casey Marie Schwartzmier was feisty.

She was outspoken and smart.

And, at age 20, she died, after a long struggle with addiction.

That is the portrait painted in her frank and revealing obituary, which was penned by her mother, Michelle. The candid obit offers an affectionate description of the daughter that Schwartzmier lost this month, and speaks in clear and honest terms about the addiction that she faced.

“Casey never wanted to be defined only by her addiction and mistakes, she was so much more than that,” the obituary states. “She made it clear if she was to ever pass as a result of it, she wanted people to know the truth with the hope that honesty about her death could help break the stigma about addicts and get people talking about the problem of addiction that is taking away so many young lives.”

This remembrance, Schwartzmier says, was what her daughter wanted.

“It was heart-wrenching,” Schwartzmier said, describing how it felt to write the obit. “It was really hard, because I wanted to find the right words, that I think she would want. … I wanted to find the right words that would possibly make a change with someone, somehow.”

Casey was a cheerleader and a dancer, her mother said. She could always make you laugh. She looked out for her little brother, and took pride in everything he did. She had big dreams for her future.

“She was beautiful. I know, I'm a biased opinion, I'm her mother,” Schwartzmier said. “But she was beautiful.”

When Casey was in high school, Schwartzmier said, “that's when a lot of her problems popped up,” and she began to show signs of addiction. And she was open about her problems, Schwartzmier said, both in personal conversations and on social media.

“If she saw somebody else struggling, or they would put a post on Facebook about needing help, she was the first one to respond and put a hand out and say, go to rehab, do this, do it for yourself,” Schwartzmier told The Washington Post.

Schwartzmier would tell Casey that she was in the same spot. And Casey would respond that she realized that, but she knew how those who were struggling felt, and she wanted them to feel support.

The obituary, Schwartzmier said, came out of a casual conversation she had with her daughter this month. Casey had sent her a link to an obituary she'd seen on Facebook. It was someone writing about their deceased child, who had struggled with addiction, too.

“She said that ‘I thought of you as soon as I saw it, because I could see you writing an amazing obituary,’" said Schwartzmier,whose story was also published in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. “And she kind of laughed. She said, ‘I could see you doing this.’”

Schwartzmier asked Casey why, and if that was something she'd even want.

“She said absolutely,” Schwartzmier said. “She said, ‘I would want that.’ She said, ‘I would want you to tell them my story.’ … She said, ‘Because when I read this, it helps me,’ she said, ‘so I think it could help someone else.’”

Schwartzmier agreed to write the obituary. Not long after that, Casey suffered an apparent overdose. Results are pending, Schwartzmier said, but her daughter was found with a needle and heroin.

“That was her biggest addiction,” Schwartzmier said. “A drug addict will do a lot of different things, but that was the worst, obviously.”

Here is what her mother wrote after her death:

“Casey isn't just another statistic or just 'another one gone too soon,' she was a great heart with a bright future and a gift that the world lost and can never be replaced. So the best way to honor Casey, is for people who read this or knew her to think twice before you judge an addict.”

And: “She was very open about her struggles and now is not the time to change that. This strong attitude with a fierce drive and loving beautiful heart that wanted to help other addicts even in death is one of the many things that she can be defined by, not her addiction.”

And: “Casey believed strongly in second chances, maybe because she craved another chance for herself and other addicts, so she donated her life saving organs to give someone else, a second chance at life. That was Casey: this amazing woman should be remembered for this and not her mistakes.”

Casey lived in Ross Township, which is in Allegheny County, Pa. Her obituary describes her as “a beautiful, intelligent child of the suburbs” who fell into the grips of addiction.

In Allegheny County, a story like Casey's has played out again and again. The Postreported in October that the county saw more than 400 opioid overdose deaths in 2015.

“There is an opioid overdose epidemic in the U.S., and Allegheny County is not immune,” county officials said in a July 2016 report.

In September, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf (D) addressed the state's opioid epidemic, calling it “a public health crisis, the likes of which we have not before seen.”

“Every day we lose 10 Pennsylvanians to the disease of addiction,” he said,according to a transcript of the remarks posted by PA Media Group. “This disease does not have compassion, or show regard for status, gender, race, or borders. It affects each and every Pennsylvanian, and threatens entire communities throughout our commonwealth.”

Casey was in and out of several rehab facilities before her death, her mother said, and she had participated in Narcotics Anonymous. Ultimately, none of those efforts would work. Before her death, she was set to return to rehab in California.

For Christmas, Casey built her mother a memory box, her mother said. She painted it and bedazzled it, like a little kid. “She said, ‘I don't know if I'm too old for this, but you always said that you loved the homemade gifts the best,’" Schwartzmier said. In that box, Schwartzmier said, Casey left a letter.

“And in that letter, she talked about how she just wanted to make us proud again,” Schwartzmier said. Her daughter wrote that she had been depressed over the past year, “thinking that she'd never get away from this,” Schwartzmier said. Casey said she was going to go to California, though, and had hope.

“And the last thing she said in that letter is, ‘I want this to be the last Christmas you'll ever be sad,’" Schwartzmier said. “Because she knew I was scared, she knew I was upset. That was Casey. Right before it happened, she just was still thinking of other people.”

Ronda Rousey is 'probably done', UFC president Dana White says

Ronda Rousey’s fighting career is most likely finished, UFC president Dana White said Monday.

White said on the UFC Unfiltered podcastthat he’d spoken to Rousey recently and did not get the indication that she wanted to fight again.

“Her spirits are good and she’s doing her own thing,” White said. “In the conversation I had with her, if I had to say right here, right now – and I don’t like saying right here, right now because it’s up to her, it’s her thing – but I wouldn’t say she fights again. I think she’s probably done. I think she’s going to ride off in the sunset and start living her life outside of fighting.”

Rousey, 29, became the UFC’s first female champion in 2012 and made six defenses of the women’s bantamweight belt, all inside the distance and all but one inside the first round. But the former Olympic bronze medallist suffered a spectacular knockout loss to Holly Holm in 2015, then after a year-long layoff was dominated in her comeback fight against current champion Amanda Nunes on 30 December.

“It’s not that I even think it was an invincible thing, it’s that she’s so competitive that her career and record meant everything to her,” White said. “Then, once she lost, she started to say to herself, ‘What the hell am I doing? This is my whole life? This is it? I want to experience and start doing other things.’ That’s what she’s started to do.

“She’s got a lot of money. She’s never going to need money again. First of all, unless you spend money like crazy, unless you spend money like Floyd [Mayweather], you’re not going to need money again when you have the kind of money that Ronda has. She’s not a big spender. She’s got a cute place down in Venice, California.”

Added White: “She changed the world. She put female fighting on the map. She’s been part of the biggest fights in the history of women fighting and I hope those records can be broken. I don’t know if they can but I hope they can.”

Holm will fight at UFC 208 on 11 February in Brooklyn.

Obama Should Stop Trashing Trump

Trump’s travel ban is already a fiasco. Obama is only hurting his own reputation by piling on.

Barack Obama vacated the White House on January 20 with a 59 percent approval rating, one of the highest that a two-term president has had since Bill Clinton’s time. Perhaps this is why he felt compelled to denounce his successor after just a week into his retirement?

If people expected Obama to take a few months off before leveraging his persona and celebrity against President Donald Trump, those beliefs were extinguished today when the forty-fourth president all but encouraged further nationwide protests with the aim of weakening Trump’s executive orders. He would be better off focusing on improving his golf game in Palm Springs, where he is currently vacationing before he returns to Washington, DC. Maybe he can shoot a few rounds of hoops as well. Anything would be better than his comments inserting himself into the brouhaha over Trump’s travel ban. No modern president has been so reckless as to decry their successor right at the outset of their presidency.

Through a spokesman, President Obama stated unequivocally that Trump's restrictions on immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries are contrary to American values and foolish from the standpoint of U.S. national security. “In his final official speech as President,” Obama’s spokesman said, “[Obama] spoke about the important role of citizen and how all Americans have a responsibility to be the guardians of our democracy — not just during an election but every day. Citizens exercising their Constitutional right to assemble, organize and have their voices heard by their elected officials is exactly what we expect to see when American values are at stake.”

Like all Americans, President Obama is certainly entitled to his opinion. Indeed, there are millions of people across the country right now that would agree with what Obama is saying. Even for those who largely support Trump’s immigration restrictions on a temporary basis, it’s hard not to acknowledge that the administration’s implementation of the executive order has been a badly bungled process—key cabinet members, including Defense Secretary James Mattis and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, weren’t consulted before President Trump signed the order at the Pentagon. The public relations surrounding this issue has been nothing but negative for the Trump White House over the last few days.

But with that being said, President Obama should be careful. By criticizing Trump so blatantly and openly after just one week on the job, Obama is breaking a largely unwritten but respected rule within the presidential club—a rule stating that presidents should keep critiques to themselves in order to protect the allure and stature of the office. While one can argue that Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton weren’t exactly deferential to their successors, they at least had the self-control to not blurt out their opposition after just a single week in retirement.

Perhaps President Obama felt he needed to speak up, having all but promised his supporters before transferring power to Donald Trump that he would make his voice heard when bad policies are enacted or American values are infringed upon. Perhaps he now feels free to say what’s on his mind without worrying about the political cost. That, however, doesn’t excuse the optics of Obama’s comments. Indeed, Obama’s remarks look like a popular president who desperately wants to be seen as one of America’s greatest kicking a new president while he’s already down and trying to learn how to run the federal government.

This isn’t the first time Obama has broken precedent. This summer, during the heat of the general election campaign, Obama used his last few trips overseas as opportunities to drill home to a foreign audience how terrible Donald Trump would be to world stability. Paul Saunders has written about it in these pages before.

Just like it was inappropriate for Obama to convert his foreign trips into campaign-related events on behalf of the Democratic presidential nominee, it is more than premature for the forty-fourth president to all but incite further demonstrations against his successor. Obama is only undermining himself, not Trump. He should take a page out of the George W. Bush playbook and stay out of the limelight for a while.