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Feb 19
British couple sentenced to 10 years in prison in Iran, family say

Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has condemned their sentence as "completely appalling and totally unjustifiable". "We will pursue this case relentlessly with the Iranian government until we see Craig and Lindsay Foreman safely returned to the UK and reunited with their family," she said. The couple were arrested in January 2025 while travelling through the country on an around-the-world motorcycle journey and detained on charges of espionage. The Foremans, from East Sussex, who are being held in Tehran's Evin prison, deny the allegations. The couple's family says the sentence places the case "in line with the most severe politically motivated detentions of UK nationals in Iran". Joe Bennett, Lindsay Foreman's son, said that the couple has been "sentenced to 10 years following a trial that lasted just three hours and in which they were not allowed to present a defence". "They have consistently denied the allegations. We have seen no evidence to support the charge of espionage," he added. The sentence follows a court appearance on 27 October 2025 before Judge Abolghasem Salavati at Branch 15 of the Islamic Revolutionary Court in Tehran. Judge Salavati has previously been sanctioned by the UK, US and EU in connection with human rights violations and the conduct of trials criticised internationally for lack of due process. Ahead of his sentencing, Mr Foreman described being held in an "eight-foot cell with a hole in the floor and a sink" and described the effects of 57 days in solitary confinement, saying: "Emotionally and physically, it broke me to pieces". He said once a month meetings with his wife are what sustain him. Read more from Sky News:Trump could be about to force yet another Labour U-turnRetail warns of more job losses Mr Bennett said the couple had "already spent more than thirteen months in detention". "We are deeply concerned about their welfare and about the lack of transparency in the judicial process," he added. He called on the UK Government to "act decisively and use every available avenue to secure their release". The Foreign Office is currently warning people not to travel to Iran, because of "the significant risk of arrest questioning or detention". It warns that: "The UK government will not be able to help you if you get into difficulty in Iran." Iran has arrested dozens of foreign visitors and dual nationals in recent years, mostly on espionage and security-related charges. Human rights groups and some Western countries have accused Iran of trying to win concessions from other nations through arrests on trumped up charges. British-Iranian dual nationals like Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe and Anoosheh Ashoori are among those who have spent years behind bars in Iran before diplomatic negotiations helped secure their release. The sentencing of the Foremans comes amid heightened tensions in the region following a deadly crackdown on a wave of demonstrations in Iran. Donald Trump last month urged Iranian protesters - thousands of whom have been killed by the regime's forces - to keep demonstrating and promised that "help is on the way". A powerful US military force continues to assemble within striking distance of Iran.

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No Writer
Feb 19
Dennis the Menace plays 'greatest prank yet' as Royal Mint presses 75-year anniversary 50p coins

A collaboration between the Royal Mint and Beano will see Dennis and his dog Gnasher feature on collectable 50p coins. Vibrant colour printing is available, meaning the cartoon character's famous red and black jumper pops next to an engraving that reads "75 years of Dennis". The character made his first appearance in issue 452 of the Beano on 17 March 1951 and has since appeared on the BBC, ITV, and in video games. Dennis and Gnasher were also the mascots for Beanoland in Chessington World of Adventures from 1999 to 2010. It's the latest birthday celebration for the famous prankster. For his 60th, he and Gnasher gatecrashed the headquarters of Sky News in a comic strip. Rebecca Morgan, from the Royal Mint, said there's "something wonderfully fitting about this legendary mischief-maker finally making his mark" on the collectable coins. "I'm sure Dennis himself would see it as his greatest prank yet," she added. Rob Glenny, from Beano, which was launched by Dundee-based publisher DC Thomson in 1938, said the coin "captures the unmistakable spark that has kept Dennis at the heart of childhood for generations". Read more: How the Beano's characters have changed The commemorative coin is available to buy from the Royal Mint's website from today, starting at £15. Fom 26 February, visitors to the Royal Mint Experience, based in Llantrisant, South Wales, will also be able to mint their own Dennis the Menace coin.

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Nick Martin, people and politics correspondent, in Manchester
Feb 19
Gorton and Denton by-election: It's the UK's first crucial vote of the year - and something striking seems to be happening

And perhaps that's the point. In places like these, elections are rarely theatrical. They are quieter, more incremental, the odd conversation among friends who might pass each other in the street. But that doesn't mean feelings don't run deep. In the past, this by-election would have been a dead cert for Labour. In reality, the mood on the ground suggests something more unsettled. Something subtler and potentially more significant: fragmentation. Things got off to an interesting start when Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham was blocked from standing as Labour's candidate here. As one of the most recognisable figures in Greater Manchester - and consistently more personally popular than Sir Keir Starmer in national polling - Burnham would likely have started as favourite. His exclusion fuelled talk that Labour's leadership was wary of giving him a Westminster platform that could lead ultimately to a leadership challenge. At the same time, Reform's candidate has been publicly endorsed by Tommy Robinson - a backing the party has sought to distance itself from. Reform curious… At the busy indoor market in Gorton, former Labour voter Theresa Jewell is blunt about why she has switched. "I don't like Labour, and it's Keir Starmer I don't like," she says. "He was the reason I wouldn't vote for Labour." She now plans to back Reform. "I don't think there's really anybody else that I trust." For her, the move is personal rather than ideological - a judgement about leadership and direction. …or going Green? A few stalls away, Chenise says she would previously have been "more likely to vote Labour", but she now feels politically displaced. "As a woman, as a woman of colour, I feel like I'm under threat by Reform," she says. "It's like they want to go backwards." Instead, she is considering the Greens. Her frustration with Labour is not that the government has been too radical, but that it appears to be edging toward what she sees as Reform's language. "Their policies seem to now be more reflective of what Reform is, what the Conservatives are," she argues. "I don't think it reflects what working-class people want right now - and even what Labour should have stood for." Between those two poles sits another perspective. Atif, who owns a sweet shop and bakery in Longsight, says most Asian voters he knows "are on the Labour side, mostly", but he is now "thinking Green". He describes himself as "sick, tired of the Labour policies". His frustration is less cultural than practical - about pressure on local services like doctors and dentists. And then there is Jason, another former Labour voter who says he is "absolutely voting Reform." His reasoning is direct: "It's the cost of living, it is immigration… you've just got to sit down and think which is best." For him, Reform represents disruption and clarity in a crowded political landscape. A coalition under strain What is striking is not that Labour is losing voters - governing parties often do in mid-term contests. It is that the losses appear to be fragmenting. Reform attract those who want sharper rhetoric and disruption. The Greens attract those who feel Labour have diluted their values. Others express fatigue rather than fury. This is not a single ideological realignment; it is a coalition under strain. Read more from Sky News:What's happening with this year's local elections? The geography reinforces the divide. The Manchester half of the seat is younger and more diverse, with significant Muslim communities and a history of strong Labour majorities. Denton, by contrast, is older, more white, and more owner-occupied - closer in character to the towns where Reform have been polling strongly. Cross the motorway and the political temperature changes. In Denton, the language of fairness and neglect comes more readily. And even the infrastructure feels symbolic. Denton station runs two trains a week - one in each direction, on a Saturday morning. There are long-term proposals to integrate the line into Greater Manchester's expanding tram network, but for now the image is stark: a town six miles from Manchester city centre that can feel further away. That sense of proximity without connection feeds a broader narrative - one Reform seek to harness and Labour seek to counter. But whether frustration coalesces into a decisive swing remains unclear. This by-election will not alter the parliamentary arithmetic. But it may reveal something about the arithmetic of allegiance. Labour's vote here does not appear to be collapsing in a single direction. Instead, it looks thinner, more conditional, more open to persuasion - or protest. In Gorton and Denton, political loyalty is no longer automatic. It is negotiated. And that makes this contest more revealing than its size suggests. Here is the full list of candidates standing in the Gorton and Denton by-election: Angeliki Stogia, Labour PartyCharlotte Cadden, The Conservative PartyMatt Goodwin, Reform UKJackie Pearcey, Liberal DemocratsHannah Spencer, Green PartySebastian Moore, Social Democratic PartyJoseph O'Meachair, The Rejoin EU PartyDan Clarke, Libertarian PartyHugo Wils, Communist LeagueSir Oink A-lot, The Official Monster Raving Loony PartyNick Buckley, Advance UK The by-election takes place next Thursday, 26 February.

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No Writer
Feb 19
Arsenal blew it against Wolves but how and why did they unravel at Molineux? It was about more than just one mistake

A hefty chunk of their own fans count themselves among the doubters and even Mikel Arteta, so often the passionate defender of his players, appeared bereft at what he had just witnessed. "We have to blame ourselves," Arteta said after this dramatic 2-2 draw. When Piero Hincapie put Arsenal two up, it should have been over. But Hugo Bueno's goal altered the mood and they never did wrestle back the initiative. "I can't believe how many times they gave the ball away cheaply," said Paul Merson on Sky Sports. Wolves 2-2 Arsenal - Match report and highlightsLive Premier League table | Watch FREE PL highlightsGot Sky? Watch Premier League games LIVE on your phone📱No Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW📺 Their game-management at Molineux was wretched. Wolves had more of the ball in the second half - completing 180 passes to Arsenal's 163. And while Rob Edwards praised his team's spirit, that statistic says more about Arsenal's desperate decision-making. For long periods in that second half, Arteta could be seen shaking his head or turning back to the bench with arms outstretched. He was urging his team to stay calm, telling them to recirculate possession. When they tried to pass it, Wolves were pulled around. But Arsenal allowed the pattern of the game to change and that is damning. It was only in stoppage time that they really tried to shut things down - stalling for time and delaying the restarts. Even that could be interpreted as a weak attempt to hang on. Why did Raya keep going long? David Raya's handling error for the equalising goal is what will be remembered of his performance, but throughout the entire second half he was pumping balls long without success. In the first half, he had kept possession, in the second half he surrendered it. He was not alone. Martin Zubimendi and Declan Rice are supposed to bring control but that was absent. Crossfield passes went astray. At one stage late on, Leandro Trossard attempted an ambitious angled cross-shot but merely presented the ball to Jose Sa. "The performance in the second half did not show anything close to the standards [required] in this league to win," said Arteta. "It was one moment after another. Even though we scored second the goal, we never got to grips and had control of the game." Arsenal's pass completion rate during the second half dropped to 76 per cent. That was down from 87 per cent during the first 45 minutes. In that period, as Arsenal played the game in the Wolves half, it was difficult to see how this could become what it did. How Gyokeres was dominated "I just thought we were really good, really aggressive in this game in that second half," Edwards explained in the press conference. "We won a lot of duels and that allowed us then to play 40 yards higher up the pitch rather than obviously them in our final third." Santi Bueno was particularly strong up against Viktor Gyokeres. "I thought he won some brilliant duels in the second half." The Arsenal striker struggled to hold the ball up and was replaced by Gabriel Jesus, who made his only impact after the whistle. Bueno, a centre-back, had more touches in the opposition penalty box than Arsenal's two strikers. Perhaps it is no great surprise if the centre-forwards are coming up short, but what will really alarm Arteta is the dip from players that he has come to rely upon. What can Arteta change now? Raya and Gabriel have been giants for this side but it was their judgement that went awry in the big moment, even if it did stem from an attempt to take responsibility. Why was Zubimendi not providing that metronomic passing to snuff out this comeback? "They know what is required but weren't able to do it," said Arteta. Does he need to look at himself? Did his second-half changes against Wolves add to Arsenal's problems rather than help to solve them? Could Christian Norgaard be a controlling influence? Asked about the pressure that is building on this Arsenal team, Bukayo Saka told Sky Sports: "I just think we need to just get back to our level, just do the basics right." He is correct. But what if it is the pressure that is preventing Arsenal from doing those basics? They could hardly miss the home fans chanting 'second again' in their direction, a reference to Arsenal's reputation as nearly men. Two wins from seven at the wrong time. Manchester City, champions in six of the last eight seasons, know it is in their hands again. Whether that flips the pressure remains to be seen. The worry for Arsenal and Arteta is that Pep Guardiola and his players, despite issues of their own, will handle that far better than the team that contrived to make history at Molineux on Wednesday evening.

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Nick Martin, people and politics correspondent, in Manchester
Feb 19
Gorton and Denton by-election: It's the UK's first crucial vote of the year - and something striking seems to be happening

And perhaps that's the point. In places like these, elections are rarely theatrical. They are quieter, more incremental, the odd conversation among friends who might pass each other in the street. But that doesn't mean feelings don't run deep. In the past, this by-election would have been a dead cert for Labour. In reality, the mood on the ground suggests something more unsettled. Something subtler and potentially more significant: fragmentation. Things got off to an interesting start when Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham was blocked from standing as Labour's candidate here. As one of the most recognisable figures in Greater Manchester - and consistently more personally popular than Sir Keir Starmer in national polling - Burnham would likely have started as favourite. His exclusion fuelled talk that Labour's leadership was wary of giving him a Westminster platform that could lead ultimately to a leadership challenge. At the same time, Reform's candidate has been publicly endorsed by Tommy Robinson - a backing the party has sought to distance itself from. Reform curious… At the busy indoor market in Gorton, former Labour voter Theresa Jewell is blunt about why she has switched. "I don't like Labour, and it's Keir Starmer I don't like," she says. "He was the reason I wouldn't vote for Labour." She now plans to back Reform. "I don't think there's really anybody else that I trust." For her, the move is personal rather than ideological - a judgement about leadership and direction. …or going Green? A few stalls away, Chenise says she would previously have been "more likely to vote Labour", but she now feels politically displaced. "As a woman, as a woman of colour, I feel like I'm under threat by Reform," she says. "It's like they want to go backwards." Instead, she is considering the Greens. Her frustration with Labour is not that the government has been too radical, but that it appears to be edging toward what she sees as Reform's language. "Their policies seem to now be more reflective of what Reform is, what the Conservatives are," she argues. "I don't think it reflects what working-class people want right now - and even what Labour should have stood for." Between those two poles sits another perspective. Atif, who owns a sweet shop and bakery in Longsight, says most Asian voters he knows "are on the Labour side, mostly", but he is now "thinking Green". He describes himself as "sick, tired of the Labour policies". His frustration is less cultural than practical - about pressure on local services like doctors and dentists. And then there is Jason, another former Labour voter who says he is "absolutely voting Reform." His reasoning is direct: "It's the cost of living, it is immigration… you've just got to sit down and think which is best." For him, Reform represents disruption and clarity in a crowded political landscape. A coalition under strain What is striking is not that Labour is losing voters - governing parties often do in mid-term contests. It is that the losses appear to be fragmenting. Reform attract those who want sharper rhetoric and disruption. The Greens attract those who feel Labour have diluted their values. Others express fatigue rather than fury. This is not a single ideological realignment; it is a coalition under strain. Read more from Sky News:What's happening with this year's local elections? The geography reinforces the divide. The Manchester half of the seat is younger and more diverse, with significant Muslim communities and a history of strong Labour majorities. Denton, by contrast, is older, more white, and more owner-occupied - closer in character to the towns where Reform have been polling strongly. Cross the motorway and the political temperature changes. In Denton, the language of fairness and neglect comes more readily. And even the infrastructure feels symbolic. Denton station runs two trains a week - one in each direction, on a Saturday morning. There are long-term proposals to integrate the line into Greater Manchester's expanding tram network, but for now the image is stark: a town six miles from Manchester city centre that can feel further away. That sense of proximity without connection feeds a broader narrative - one Reform seek to harness and Labour seek to counter. But whether frustration coalesces into a decisive swing remains unclear. This by-election will not alter the parliamentary arithmetic. But it may reveal something about the arithmetic of allegiance. Labour's vote here does not appear to be collapsing in a single direction. Instead, it looks thinner, more conditional, more open to persuasion - or protest. In Gorton and Denton, political loyalty is no longer automatic. It is negotiated. And that makes this contest more revealing than its size suggests. Here is the full list of candidates standing in the Gorton and Denton by-election: Angeliki Stogia, Labour PartyCharlotte Cadden, The Conservative PartyMatt Goodwin, Reform UKJackie Pearcey, Liberal DemocratsHannah Spencer, Green PartySebastian Moore, Social Democratic PartyJoseph O'Meachair, The Rejoin EU PartyDan Clarke, Libertarian PartyHugo Wils, Communist LeagueSir Oink A-lot, The Official Monster Raving Loony PartyNick Buckley, Advance UK The by-election takes place next Thursday, 26 February.

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No Writer
Feb 19
Tetris can help tackle memories of past trauma, study finds

The trial included close to 100 NHS staff who had been exposed to trauma at work - such as witnessing deaths during the pandemic. It found those who played the classic video game as part of their treatment experienced fewer flashbacks. The study was carried out by researchers in the UK and Sweden, with experts now hoping to test the method on a larger group of people. Known as imagery competing task intervention (ICTI), the treatment involved some 40 patients playing a slow version of Tetris while briefly recalling a traumatic memory. The group were the asked to use their mind's eye to imagine the game's grid and visualise the blocks. ICTI is thought to weaken the vividness of the traumatic memories by occupying the brain's visuospatial areas, responsible for analysing and understanding physical space. Emily Holmes, a professor of psychology at Uppsala University, who led the study, said: "Even a single, fleeting intrusive memory of past trauma can exert a powerful impact in daily life by hijacking attention and leaving people at the mercy of unwanted and intrusive emotions. "By weakening the intrusive aspect of these sensory memories via this brief visual intervention, people experience fewer trauma images flashing back." The remaining patients in the study either received standard treatment, or listened to music by Mozart - along with podcasts about the Austrian composer. Read more from Sky News:'Change your AI generated passwords immediately'Tech firms face being blocked from UK The findings showed that, within four weeks, those who received the ICTI treatment had 10 times fewer flashbacks compared to other groups. After six months, 70% reported having no intrusive memories at all. The treatment also helped tackle symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. 'A real breakthrough' Prof Holmes called the study "a real breakthrough", insisting that while the treatment is more than just playing Tetris, it is designed to be "as gentle, brief, and practical as possible to fit into people's busy lives". Tayla McCloud, research lead for digital mental health at Wellcome - which funded the study - claimed the impact of the trial could be "enormous". Ms McCloud said: "It's rare to see something so accessible, scalable and adaptable across contexts. It doesn't require patients to put their trauma into words and even transcends language barriers." The apparent psychological impact of the game, which was created in 1984 by Alexey Pajitnov, has previously led to the coining of a phenomenon known as the Tetris Effect, with some claiming to see falling blocks in their dreams or buildings move together in the street after spending hours playing the game.

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Jon Craig, chief political correspondent
Feb 19
Who is Dame Antonia Romeo - the first ever woman cabinet secretary?

Britain's new top civil servant, Dame Antonia Romeo, 51, might even seem a surprising choice as the new cabinet secretary - the first woman to do the job - for a prime minister, Sir Keir Starmer, who's accused of being dull and conventional. While Dame Antonia was a diplomat in New York, she attended and hosted lavish parties with celebs including Ab Fab star Joanna Lumley, publishers Rupert Murdoch and Anna Wintour, top fashion models and designers such as Calvin Klein and the now-disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein. Politics latest: First woman appointed as head of the civil service She's controversial because of allegations, investigated by the Cabinet Office and dismissed with "no case to answer", of bullying and questionable expenses claims, including private school fees for her children and a last-minute flight to attend the BAFTA awards. The boss of the top civil servants' union, Dave Penman, blamed "misogyny" for the allegations and claimed she was targeted because she was a "female candidate with a profile" and an "outgoing, dynamic" personality. There have been other barbs, though. A role as the Civil Service's gender champion, after setting up Whitehall's "gender equality leadership group", earned her the nickname "the Queen of Woke". She certainly has an impressive CV, which is even longer than her full name, Dame Antonia Rebecca Caroline Angharad Catherine Romeo. In fact, her romantic surname is her married name. She was born Antonia Rice-Evans. She has been the top civil servant, the permanent secretary, in three large government departments, International Trade, the Ministry of Justice and the Home Office, where she has been in charge since April last year. She may be seen as unorthodox and unconventional, but she has the traditional background for a top Whitehall mandarin, Westminster public school and then PPE, politics, philosophy, and economics at Oxford University. She did not join the civil service immediately after university, though, instead working for three years as a business consultant. But once she did, first at the Lord Chancellor's Department and then the Department of Constitutional Affairs, she was soon a high-flyer and her ascent was swift. Back at the Lord Chancellor's department, she was principal private secretary - Bernard Woolley in Yes Minister - to Charlie Falconer in Tony Blair's government and then Jack Straw when Gordon Brown was PM. Further promotions came fast. In David Cameron's Coalition government, she worked for Tory minister Francis Maude in the Cabinet Office, then back to the Justice ministry and again back to the Cabinet Office. Then came the diplomatic posts in New York, where she earned her reputation for the party lifestyle, before becoming the top mandarin at International Trade under Liam Fox. Then it was back to Justice and the top job, under five secretaries of state, Tories Robert Buckland, Dominic Raab (twice), Brandon Lewis and Alex Chalk, and Labour's Shabana Mahmood, before the Home Office under Yvette Cooper and Mahmood again. As well as her glittering, if controversial career, Romeo is president of the Whitehall Choir, said to be one of London's leading amateur choirs. And after the brutal way cabinet secretary Sir Chris Wormald has been ousted by the PM after just over a year in the job, she will be hoping to sing from the same hymn sheet as Sir Keir. Or his successor, of course.

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No Writer
Feb 19
Vinicius Jr: Jose Mourinho's comments after Real Madrid forward reports alleged racist abuse criticised by Jamie Carragher

European football's governing body confirmed on Wednesday that it was investigating the allegations that Gianluca Prestianni racially abused Vini Jr after he scored the games' only goal. It is understood the investigator will take time to interview the relevant parties, before putting together a report for the disciplinary body, which will make a decision over any further punishment, should it see fit. There is no timescale on investigations but Sky Sports News has been told it could take two to three weeks for the investigation to conclude, meaning that Prestianni, as it stands, is likely to be available for selection for the second leg of the Champions League knockout round play-off in Madrid on February 25. It comes amid a backlash against Jose Mourinho and a response from the Portuguese club claiming a "defamation campaign" against their player. Vinicius reported the alleged abuse to the referee, resulting in the Champions League knockout play-off first leg being suspended for 10 minutes - in line with UEFA regulations - on Tuesday. The Real Madrid winger scored the goal in his side's 1-0 win, after which he celebrated in front of the Benfica fans before he was allegedly abused by Prestianni. Prestianni pulled his shirt over his mouth while confronting Vinicius but denies the allegation of racism. A UEFA ethics and disciplinary inspector has since been appointed to "investigate allegations of discriminatory behaviour". UEFA regulations state: "Any player or team official found guilty of racist conduct must be suspended for at least 10 matches." Vinicius' Real Madrid team-mate, Kylian Mbappe, said after the game that he and other Benfica players heard what Prestianni said to Vinicius. But Benfica released a statement on Wednesday offering their "full support" to their player and suggested a "defamation campaign" is in action against him. Mourinho suggests Vinicius 'incited' reaction Mourinho has been widely criticised for his reaction to the incident after saying of Vinicius: "When you score a goal like that, you celebrate in a respectful way." Later asked if he believed Vinicius "incited" the home crowd and players with his celebration, the Benfica boss added: "Yeah, I believe so. The words they exchange, Prestianni with Vinicius, I want to be independent. I don't comment about it. "When he was arguing about racism I told him the biggest person in the history of this club was black [Eusebio]. This club, the last thing it is is racist, so if in his mind it was something in relation to that, this is Benfica. "There is something wrong because it happens in every stadium. Every stadium that Vinicius plays [in] something happens. Always." Carra: It's rich coming from Mourinho Sky Sports' Jamie Carragher, speaking on CBS, described Mourinho as "a guy who celebrates and antagonises the opposition probably more than any coach has ever done". "Anyone can celebrate how they like," Carragher added. "You shouldn't get racially abused no matter what. "It feels a little rich coming from Mourinho. "Remember him running down the touchline at Old Trafford? I remember in a cup final against Liverpool when Chelsea scored very late, [Mourinho was] telling all the Liverpool supporters to shut up. "It's a bit rich coming from him to be having a pop at Vinicius Jr for his celebration. It's a huge goal in a big Champions League game, he's more than entitled to celebrate how he likes." 'It's hypocrisy from Jose' Meanwhile, Micah Richards described Mourinho's comments as "hypocrisy". "Mourinho is someone who I absolutely love as a coach," the Sky Sports pundit said on CBS' Champions League coverage. "I expect better from him because he's a powerful person within the sport. A lot of people listen to what he says. "It's hypocrisy from him talking about Vinicius Jr when he celebrates how he wants." Seedorf: Mourinho made 'big mistake' Former Real Madrid midfielder Clarence Seedorf, who was working as a pundit at the game, said Mourinho made "a big mistake" with his comments. He said on Amazon Prime: "I think he made a big mistake today to justify racial abuse. I'm not saying that was the case today but he mentioned something more than today. "He said wherever he goes these things happen so he's saying it's OK when Vinicius provokes you, that is it OK to be racist and I think that is very wrong. "We should never, ever justify racial abuse." Kick It Out accuses Mourinho of 'gaslighting' Meanwhile, anti-discrimination charity Kick It Out has accused Mourinho of gaslighting for his response to Vinicius Jr's allegations of racist abuse. A Kick It Out statement said: "When anyone reports discrimination in football, or anywhere, the first priority is that they are listened to and feel supported. "Focusing on Vinicius Jr's goal celebration or the history of the club, instead of acknowledging the report, is a form of gaslighting. "This approach not only harms the individual affected but also sends the wrong message to others around the world who may have experienced similar situations. "Leaders in football have a crucial role in setting standards, and moments like these call for responsible leadership that reinforces respect, inclusion, and accountability. "We look forward to a thorough investigation into this incident, with appropriate accountability linked to the outcome."

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