Bundlezy – Page 131 – My WordPress Blog

الدكتور عبدالمعطي حسين في ذمة الله

ببالغ الحزن والأسى، نعت الأوساط الطبية في مصر والعالم العربي  الدكتور عبدالمعطي حسين، مدير مستشفيات قصر العيني الأسبق، الذي وافته المنية عصر اليوم الخميس الموافق 12 يونيو 2025. ويُعد الراحل من القامات البارزة في مجال الجراحة، حيث شغل عدة مناصب مرموقة، من بينها: أستاذ الجراحة بكلية طب القصر العيني. رئيس جمعية الجراحين المصرية. عضو مجلس …

ظهرت المقالة الدكتور عبدالمعطي حسين في ذمة الله أولاً على أحداث العرب.

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من هو فيجاي روباني الذي توفي في حادث سقوط الطائرة الهندية – ويكيبيديا

من هو فيجاي روباني الذي توفي في حادث سقوط الطائرة الهندية – ويكيبيديا فيجاي روباني فيجاي رامنيكلال روباني (2 أغسطس 1956 – 12 يونيو 2025) سياسي هندي بارز، عُرف بتوليه منصب رئيس وزراء ولاية غوجارات بين عامي 2016 و2021، وكان أحد الشخصيات القيادية في حزب بهاراتيا جاناتا (BJP)، الحزب الحاكم في الهند لفترات طويلة. مثّل …

ظهرت المقالة من هو فيجاي روباني الذي توفي في حادث سقوط الطائرة الهندية – ويكيبيديا أولاً على أحداث العرب.

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Viktor Gyokeres breaks silence on transfer drama with blunt 22-word statement as Man Utd and Arsenal battle for star

VIKTOR GYOKERES has bluntly broken his silence on his transfer fall-out with Sporting Lisbon chiefs with a brief 22-word statement.

The Sweden striker has reportedly come to blows with Sporting bosses after trying to force through a dream move to the Premier League.

LISBON, PORTUGAL - MARCH 15: Viktor Gyokeres of Sporting looks on during the Liga Portugal Betclic match between Sporting CP and FC Famalicao at Estadio Jose Alvalade on March 15, 2025 in Lisbon, Portugal. (Photo by Maciej Rogowski/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images)
Viktor Gyokeres broke his silence on his transfer drama with Sporting

Gyokeres, 27, is allegedly furious with Sporting for going back on their word over a promise to lower his £84million release clause and plans not to play for the club again.

He believes he had a gentleman’s agreement to leave the Portuguese giants for £50million with a further £8million in add-ons, but that claim has been denied by president Frederico Varandas.

The former Coventry striker then reportedly threatened to go on strike while vowing not to play for the club again if they don’t lower their offer.

But Varandas insisted he will not be bullied into letting the Arsenal and Manchester United target move to the Prem on the cheap this summer.

Varandas said: “Sporting will not accept blackmail and insults – you should know me better by now.”

But Gyokeres has now tried to play down the squabble rumours by throwing doubt on some of the reports with a short statement on social media.

He wrote on his Instagram story on Thursday evening: “There is a lot of talks at the moment, most of it is false. I will speak when the time is right.”

It also comes after reports claimed that Arsenal submitted a new bid for Gyokeres on Wednesday, with his agent Hasan Cetinkaya visiting London to fast-track the transfer.

Headline: Viktor Gyokeres breaks silence on transfer drama with blunt 22-word statement as Man Utd and Arsenal battle for star,
Gyokeres has now tried to silence speculation by throwing doubt on some of the reports
Sporting chief Frederico Varandas (front) hit back at Viktor Gyokeres this week

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But Varandas statement also read: “I can guarantee that Viktor Gyokeres will not leave for €60m+10m (£51m+£8.5m) because I never promised him that.

“This game that the agent is playing only makes the situation worse. To this day, Sporting has not had an offer for Viktor, neither today nor last season.”

“It was agreed that Sporting would not demand the release clause at the end of the following season, especially because he was going to be 27.”

The Swede is one of the most in-demand players this summer after scoring a staggering 97 goals in 102 matches for Sporting since joining in the summer of 2023.

Last season, he netted he netted 54 times in 52 outings – including a Champions League hat-trick against Manchester City, while 39 of those goals came in just 33 league games.

Despite United’s interest, Arsenal remain favourites to nab him, with new director of football Andrea Berta a big fan from his days at Atletico Madrid.

Gyokeres has removed any reference to Sporting on his Instagram account, having also got rid of any mention of Sweden and Nike.

He has three years remaining on his contract in Lisbon, but he is determined to take on a new challenge after just two years at the club, where he won the league twice, and completed a domestic double this season.

United boss Ruben Amorim, who managed Gyokeres at Sporting, has since been linked with a shock move for Liverpool and Chelsea target Hugo Ekitike.

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Labour promise to ‘end asylum hotels’ is worthless… Reeves will be turfed out long before last asylum seeker leaves B&B

AS election manifesto pledges go, it was as ­simple and straightforward as they get: Labour will “end asylum hotels, saving the taxpayer billions of pounds”.

No wriggle room there, you might think. Not SOME asylum hotels, ALL of them.

Men standing outside a hotel.
Labour pledged to ‘end asylum hotels, saving the taxpayer billions of pounds’
Rachel Reeves, Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, standing outside 11 Downing Street.
Getty
Chancellor Rachel Reeves gave a helpful update this week on that vow to the British people[/caption]
Refugees with luggage outside a Comfort Inn hotel.
PA
Migrants camped out on the streets of London[/caption]

And, given the current huge annual cost of housing Channel migrants, that would surely save taxpayers money. Simple!

Well, sorry to be the bearer of bad — and expensive — news, but apparently not.

After 11 months in office, Chancellor Rachel Reeves gave a helpful update this week on that vow to the British people during her Spending Review, and added in the teeny-tiny oh-so-insignificant caveat that it wouldn’t actually happen until 2029.

That’s four long years away. It also means many more billions of pounds of taxpayers’ money being thrown away.

After all, the Government is currently forking out more than £4BILLION a year to house illegal migrants, some of whom have arrived on small boats, and even by 2029 asylum costs are STILL predicted to top £2.5billion a year — with or without a hotel room in sight.

After the Tories failed to deliver on their ­promise to stop putting asylum seekers in hotels, we have every right to be cynical.

Indeed, they were happily paying for expensive four-star rooms until that was exposed to widespread public fury.

But even if Labour do actually keep their manifesto pledge by 2029, what does “ending ­asylum hotels” actually mean?

Let’s look at the best-case scenario. Let’s ­imagine a world where Home Office officials go to warp speed to process the massive backlog of asylum seekers who are currently waiting years to learn their fate.

Will that mean we can finally stop paying for their accommodation? Almost ­certainly not.

Although Britain already grants asylum at a far higher rate than most other European countries (indeed, it offers asylum to those who’ve already failed to win it elsewhere in Europe), tens of thousands of claims from ­undocumented economic migrants are still likely to be refused.

So will that mean those failed asylum seekers will be packed off home and finally off our books?

Nope. Unless their own countries agree to take them back and their safety can be guaranteed in places like Iran, Afghanistan or Eritrea, then I’m afraid they will be staying right here.

What about shipping them off to third countries, like Rwanda or Albania, if they won’t go home?

Again, that’s a non-starter under Sir Keir Starmer, whose human rights lawyer chums will have a field day arguing for failed asylum seekers’ rights to a family life in Britain.

Staying right here

If it turns out that the thousands of young men who pay people-smugglers to get on dinghies to come to our shores are NOT in fact all brilliant rocket scientists, brain surgeons and engineers, they will ­probably end up working in low-wage jobs, often in the black economy, needing benefits and will likely remain a drain on taxpayers for the rest of their lives.

Anyway, even if the Home Office could manage to deal with the existing backlog, what are they going to do about the ­thousands of new asylum seekers who are arriving from the beaches of Calais every week?

This year has so far seen the highest ever number of illegal immigrants crossing the ­Channel, with no sign — despite Sir Keir Starmer’s promises — of the smuggling gangs being smashed any time soon.

It doesn’t really matter where these ­people live; once they set foot on our beaches, we will end up footing the bill one way or another

Julia Hartley-Brewer

OK, fair enough, but at least by 2029 we won’t be paying for these new arrivals to live in hotels any more.

True, but they will need to live somewhere.

Unless the Government is secretly planning to send them off to the Falklands or give them all tents and plonk them in a field in the middle of nowhere, that means paying for their accommodation and other living costs.

If officials are not going to pay for hotels, then more and more asylum ­seekers will end up being moved into ­private rented flats and houses in a street near you.

This is already happening in many towns and cities, as companies such as Serco, Mears and Clearsprings have been handed multi-million pound contracts to strike deals with local landlords to house asylum seekers.

Hope we won’t notice

Using our hard-earned taxes, they often pay far above (sometimes even double) local market rents, with guaranteed leases for five years, with all utilities and any other costs paid for by taxpayers, and pushing rents beyond the means of ­countless local ­families.

Getting asylum seekers out of hotels also brings the added bonus that the cost of thousands of individual private rentals are rather easier to hide from the public than enormous Home Office hotel bills totalling billions.

And after the Channel migrants are ­processed and allowed to stay — with or ­without asylum status — they can then be quietly shunted on to the general benefits bill or on to local councils’ housing costs in the hope that we won’t notice or care any more.

Like so many manifestos, the promise to “end asylum hotels” isn’t worth the glossy paper it is printed on.

It doesn’t really matter where these ­people live; once they set foot on our beaches, we will end up footing the bill one way or another for years to come.

We don’t know how many more Channel migrants will turn up this week, this year or by 2029, so we can’t know how much that bill will be.

But the one thing we can say for certain is that Rachel Reeves will be turfed out of the Treasury long before the last asylum seekers are turfed out of their hotel.

HOMELESS TENT CITIES ON WAY

DON’T look now but the Deputy Prime Minister, Angela Rayner, has had another brilliant idea.

This time, her clever plan is to tackle the rising problem of rough sleeping on our streets by decriminalising it.

She plans to repeal the 1824 Vagrancy Act which, for two centuries, has made it a criminal act to sleep rough, raising fears that we will soon see tent cities pop up in our parks and streets, similar to those in San Francisco.

Ms Rayner says these people are not criminals but “vulnerable” victims of “injustice”. Indeed, this is true for many. In the first three months of this year, 4,427 people spent at least one night sleeping on the streets of our capital.

Many of them are drug addicts or alcoholics, while ­others are service veterans who are ­victims of both PTSD and a bureaucracy that just doesn’t care.

Making it easier for people to sleep on the streets won’t solve THEIR problems – but it will create more problems for everyone else.

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MAFS star quits showbiz and returns to day job as he puts a call out for new business

MARRIED At First Sight hunk Ross McCarthy has revealed that he has quit showbiz and returned to his day job.

The E4 star has returned to his roots as a painter and decorator following his failed TV marriage.

Instagram / @ross.mac91
MAFS hunk Ross has revealed he has gone back to his day job[/caption]
Channel 4
His TV marriage to Sacha failed[/caption]

Ross shared a call out for his business in which he revealed that he and his team are happy to travel for jobs far and wide.

He appears to be using his fame to drum up interest in the business by committing to doing jobs for his followers across the country.

Appealing for more custom as he returns to his old life, Ross wrote online: “To all my followers who live further away.

“If you’re looking for painting and decorating work done, especially bigger jobs, feel free to DM me.

“I’ve had a few people ask about distance, but it’s no issue now – we’re happy to travel and focus on delivering quality work every time.

“Let’s get your space looking spot on.”

His career u-turn comes just days after he bravely opened up to confirm that he is an alcoholic.

Ross made history on the show as its first deaf groom, but he broke Sacha’s heart after struggling with his anger issues. 

The reality TV star has since turned his life around – and found new love with a girlfriend Magda.

In a powerful message to fans, Ross revealed that he’s 65 days sober and determined never to go back.

In an emotional post, he shared: “For everyone who’s been asking me about this book – what is it, and what’s it done for me – well, here you go. 

“I’m finally ready to share it with the world, because I’m more stable now, and my mindset is stronger than ever.

“So yeah… I’m an alcoholic.

“And I’m proud to say that out loud now, because back then, I couldn’t.”

Ross credited a life-changing book and the unwavering support of his loved ones for helping him on his journey to sobriety.

Instagram / @ross.mac91
Ross is mow back working as a decorator[/caption]

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