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No Writer
Mar 22
'Selfless' police officer dies in line of duty

PC Bradley Corke, 27, died on Saturday, after he was critically injured in Farningham on Thursday evening. He and a colleague, who remains critically ill in hospital, were responding to an "immediate" call when their marked police car was involved in the crash. A member of the public who was in a second vehicle continues to be treated for serious injuries. "Bradley selflessly gave up his life while trying to save the lives of others who were in danger," Kent Police said. "His bravery, dedication, and passion for helping others will not be forgotten." The incident, involving a marked Ford Focus police car and a VW Scirocco, happened on the westbound A20 London Road at the junction with Button Street at around 7.45pm on Thursday. PC Corke served with the force since May 2022. He was based in Tonbridge and spent his police service in the towns of West Kent. The force is supporting his family and colleagues, who are devastated. Neil Mennie, chair of Kent Police Federation, said: "We are all absolutely heartbroken to learn of this news. "Bradley was a popular colleague who will be much missed and we will be doing all we can to support his family and close colleagues at this time. "Policing is a family and words cannot describe the pain we are all feeling and how this news will affect us in the days, weeks and months ahead. "This sad incident serves as a horrific example of the risks police officers face and how police officers can sadly make the ultimate sacrifice as they strive to keep the public safe." Read more from Sky News:Number of cases falls for first time in meningitis outbreakThe lethal party drug taken by children Kent Police is appealing for anyone with information about the collision to come forward. Witnesses or anyone with dashcam footage should contact the serious collision investigation unit. They can also reach the unit on 01622 798538, quoting EW/AL/025/26. This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version. You can receive breaking news alerts on a smartphone or tablet via the Sky News app. You can also follow us on WhatsApp and subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the latest news.

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No Writer
Mar 22
'A very strong opener': The reviews for Saturday Night Live UK's debut are in

The US version of SNL, broadcast in America on NBC, is a pop culture institution which has been running for 50 years, and launched the careers of stars including Bill Murray, Tina Fey, Eddie Murphy, Pete Davidson, Kristen Wiig and Will Ferrell. While expectations have been high at Sky HQ that a UK version of the format will be successful, others have pointed out the challenges of creating new event TV in such a fragmented media world. But, according to Steve Bennett, writing for the British comedy website Chortle, the SNL UK debut has delivered. "Whisper it, but I think they might just have nailed it," he writes "[The show has] been greeted with either feverish excitement that it could instantly become as successful as its parent, reviving British sketch comedy at a stroke, or aggressive pessimism that it'll be shit - an unwelcome transatlantic invasion that couldn't possibly work with our more cynical sense of humour. "Neither is absolutely true but tonight's episode, a very strong opener, offers great hope it's the former." The show was seen by 226,000 viewers in its 10PM slot on Sky One and won a 3.2% share of the available TV audience at the time, according to official BARB figures reported on the Deadline website. Read more: 'The idea that it's going to be a bit naff, it's just insane to me' Elsewhere, the Independent's Nick Hilton gave the debut three stars out of five, for "some hits, some misses, and a bang-on Princess Di impression". "Judging a show like SNL off its opening episode is foolish", he writes, before adding: "What SNL UK's opening episode does demonstrate is a willingness to push the envelope, to risk bad taste. "Borrowing a beloved American format might feel a bit stale, but there are notes of new ingredients that could offer something fresh." Giving the same score, The Guardian's Lucy Mangan said that SNL UK's debut "didn't fail and it could have been a lot worse". She added: "The general feeling, I think, will be that the inaugural episode of Saturday Night Live UK - Sky's version of the famous 51-year-old American original founded and still overseen by the infamous Lorne Michaels - did work." "It could have been a lot, lot worse", she added. "And it could have been a lot better... honestly - it felt refreshing to see an ambition/piece of madness like retooling a legacy US brand for this septic isle even being attempted." However, she did say one sketch was "an absolute piece of rubbish". Read more from Sky News:Ketamine crisis: The party drug sold online with free perksUK not being drawn into Iran war, government insists In The Sunday Times Charlotte Ivers was pleased that the show did not shy away from edgier humour, writing: "There's something quite refreshing about seeing TV comedians really push close to the line." But, she added, "sadly, in many cases the jokes don't live up to the risk". Some of the most positive - if not faint - praise came from The Daily Telegraph's Ed Power's four-star review, who gave credit to guest host Ms Fey and the "shockingly competent" debut. "Funny in places and never actively harmful to your emotional well-being, it went about as well as could be hoped", he added. "The only glaring issue was what sounded like deafening canned laughter throughout. If the chuckles genuinely were artificial, then it was surely overkill on the part of the producers. "Against all reasonable expectations, this homegrown Saturday Night Live was more than capable of raising real laughs on its own." Before the UK version aired on Saturday, Sky confirmed another two episodes had been commissioned, extending its run to eight shows Saturday Night Live UK will return on Sky and Now on 28 March, hosted by Jamie Dornan and featuring band Wolf Alice. It will stream on Peacock in the US the following night.

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Faye Brown, political reporter
Mar 20
Report suggests income tax cut and NI abolition to 'incentivise work'

The draft paper, by the Labour Growth Group and Good Growth Foundation, argues for a complete overhaul of Labour's economic strategy and messaging to prevent a far-right government. Policy proposals are still being worked up, but include cutting income tax and abolishing national insurance. Options for how this could be funded include equalising capital gains tax with income tax in certain areas, reforming council tax or taxing landowners. Sky News understands the report has been looked at by several cabinet ministers and potential leadership contenders. Advisors to Health Secretary Wes Streeting, former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham - all tipped as frontrunners to replace Sir Keir Starmer - are among those understood to have engaged with the work. The report is expected to be published just after the May local elections - the crunch point at which the prime minister could face a leadership challenge if they go as badly as predicted. Sir Keir has repeatedly insisted he will fight on, so anyone seeking to take him out would need the backing of 80 MPs. There is a big question mark over who could get the numbers following the move to block Mr Burnham from standing in the Gorton and Denton by-election, which Labour lost. However, the report being published at a vulnerable time piles fresh pressure on the prime minister, whose tanking poll ratings are often blamed on a failure to tackle the cost of living crisis and communicate who Labour is for. This report will suggest policies to tackle the cost of living, as well as how Labour can sell them to the public. It will say Labour needs to redesign the tax system to incentivise hard work, with greater incentives for entrepreneurs and small business owners. And it will argue that voter anger is fuelled by the belief "doing the right thing" leaves them feeling shafted, and Labour must confront those who make money from taking advantage of people. Mark McVitie, the Labour Growth Group's director, told Sky News: "Everyone in politics is correctly diagnosing the cost of living crisis. That's not enough. You go to the doctor because something's wrong, but you don't just want them to tell you you're ill and they care, you want them to find out why and fix it. That's what this project is aiming to do. "Until we can do that and take on the vested interests profiting from the mess, we're just offering painkillers for a condition that keeps getting worse." The Labour strategist said the party must be "laser focused on rewarding work and taking initiative". He added: "When someone working 60 hour weeks as a nurse or running a small business is paying a higher marginal tax rate than an institutional landlord, that's not happening. Read More:Labour's left unite behind 'major reset' call in fresh challenge to StarmerAngela Rayner slammed over 'negative intervention' about Labour government "As a party we need to be squarely on the side of those putting in the work, taking risks and doing the right thing, and not afraid to confront the vested interests who will resist that change." The paper has the draft title of Beveridge Report, named after a famous report by Sir William Beveridge, a key figure in designing Britain's welfare state. Another focus will be on devolution, with the paper saying it should be vastly expanded so regional mayors have greater fiscal powers. 👉Listen to Politics at Sam and Anne's on your podcast app👈 More than 100 Labour MPs work with the Growth Group, whose parliamentary chair is former YouGov pollster Chris Curtis. The group looks at ways to tear down barriers to economic growth, which the government says is one of its central missions. The UK's economic forecaster the OBR has predicted GDP to grow by an average 1.5% a year from 2027 to 2030. However many MPs fear voters will not feel any tangible benefit unless more is done to tackle the everyday cost of living. Sir Keir began the year with a pledge to be "laser focused" on the cost of living, but the reset has been overshadowed by the Peter Mandelson scandal, while the war in Iran has threatened to push prices up further.

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No Writer
Mar 21
Arne Slot blames latest Liverpool defeat on injury problems, fixture pile-up and club's transfer policy

Danny Welbeck's double earned Brighton a deserved victory and inflicted another loss on Slot's side at the Amex Stadium, just days after the Reds delivered their "best performance of the season" against Galatasaray in the Champions League. Slot was without goalkeeper Alisson Becker, forward Mohamed Salah and club-record signing Alexander Isak before top scorer Hugo Ekitike limped off in the eighth minute. Brighton 2-1 Liverpool | As it happened | Teams | StatsLive Premier League table | Watch FREE PL highlightsGot Sky? Watch Premier League games LIVE on your phone📱Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW 📺 The defeat saw Liverpool miss the opportunity to climb above Aston Villa into fourth place with the reigning champions taking only one point from the last nine available after they conceded late goals in a 2-1 loss at bottom club Wolves and last weekend's 1-1 draw at home to relegation-threatened Tottenham. Slot said Brighton deserved to win, but admitted his side's position was not good enough, "no matter how many excuses I can come up with". "What went wrong started off with the lead-up to this game, as so many times this season when we played a very good game and we thought we could bring that level to the first game or even better," he said. "We had Mo Salah injured, we had Alisson injured, and after two minutes Hugo Ekitike out. That has happened so many times to us this season and again now. And what happened a lot this season is also that the first chance of the other team immediately went in. "Brighton away, that's a difficult game for any team, especially if you miss out on a few very influential players," said Slot. "Of course now, looking at the league table, this loss hurts a lot and it should hurt us a lot. "But the main problem we are in this position (is) because we dropped points at Wolves in the last minute with a deflected shot (and then) a week ago (against Tottenham) - not a week ago, because we had to play on Sunday, not on Saturday, and then on Wednesday and Saturday, not as all the other Champions League teams. "The goal last week in the 90th minute is a bigger problem than losing away at Brighton." Slot said Ekitike could "play tomorrow if he needed to", but blamed his injury on Liverpool's quick turnaround following the midweek fixture. He said: "If you face a team that has only had 62 hours of rest, the first thing you do is make it an intense game, play the first duels, play tough duels. Nothing wrong with the duels, by the way, but unfortunately, it was a collision and that led to Hugo going out. "They were the better team and created more chances than us. Everything I say about this, people will see this as excuses and I never like to use excuses after the game." When it was put to Slot that there may be little sympathy for his side after the club spent £450m in the summer, he pointed to the players the club had sold. "No, I have complete sympathy with that for all the people who are saying this, because no one in England is used to the fact that there are also clubs that are selling players," he said. "Usually in England, when a club is spending £450m, which we did, that's adding to the already great team you have, but this club has a different model and no one wants to see and understand this. That I can also understand, because fans of other teams or certain pundits don't want to tell you that we've sold for £300m. "Now, if the £150m player is never available, that's already one thing. If Giovanni Leoni has never been available because of his injury, that's already the second thing. So now we're already going underneath what we've sold. "Jeremy Frimpong is recently more and more available. And Giorgi Mamardashvili was one of the other signings for £450m. He's the second goalkeeper. "It makes complete sense if you win the league last season and you spent £150m, not £450m, that expectations are high. And those expectations were high for the pundits, for the media, for me, for the fans. But at our club, we're also looking at the situation and the challenge we had during this season. "And then we might be a bit more realistic why this season has gone, why it has gone. But still it's not good enough. No matter how many excuses I can come up with, it's still not good enough, the position."

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Shingi Mararike, North of England correspondent
Mar 22
Ketamine crisis: The party drug sold online with free perks - that's attracting children as young as 10

He is one of two officers at Greater Manchester Police who have been specially trained to find the platforms, forums and sites being used by criminals to sell drugs. "It's effectively run like a legitimate business in the way that Amazon sells legitimate items," he says. "The platforms that are being used, it's Snapchat and Telegram, we see a lot of stuff on WhatsApp, basically in an attempt to avoid traditional policing tactics." What the social media investigator describes is a game of cat and mouse, driven by a Class B drug that is being taken in record numbers. "It's basically trying to catch up with criminals. If you put it in terms of cars, criminals are driving around in sports cars and things like that," he says. "Police are driving round in Fiestas and Astras, and this is exactly the same thing. But we only have to be lucky one day, they have to be lucky every day." Against the backdrop of increasing media coverage and greater public awareness of ketamine, the popular party drug is now firmly in the sights of police forces across the country, including GMP. Detective Superintendent Joseph Harrop, who leads the force's serious organised crime division, says ketamine is presenting officers with unique challenges. "I think one of the issues is that it's readily available and it's really cheap, which is why I think it's attractive to children and young people," he says. "There is a worrying trend that younger and younger children are using it. We've got children as young as 10, either with ketamine or involved in the supply of ketamine." Read more:The drug addiction leaving users in chronic painCould ketamine be used to treat depression? DSI Harrop says another way organised crime groups are making a profit from ketamine is by exporting the drug to countries where it is more tightly regulated or less easily available. He says GMP seized 50kg of ketamine in the financial year before last, a figure he believes increased substantially in 2025, because his officers made the substance more of a priority. In his words, ketamine seizures went up "exponentially", while there was also a "massive rise" in the amount of intelligence the force has collected on the drug. "One of the big challenges is because you've not got that traditional street supply," he adds. "So that does impact on some of our intelligence streams. It is all online, so there's a sense of anonymity, and you've kind of got to get behind another layer before you can see who's truly involved, but we've adapted to that." Online menus and faceless transactions The social media investigator I spoke to is a core part of GMP's attempts to adapt to the challenges ketamine poses. He spends time trying to trace the online stores being set up on social media by drug dealers. The criminals curate menus, ask for reviews and even offer people perks, like free sweets being delivered along with their drugs. Ketamine, he says, is often sold alongside other popular party drugs like cocaine and MDMA, in varying strengths and quantities. The purchases are often made using what he calls "faceless" transactions involving cryptocurrency, while the drugs are often delivered in the post, rather than by a courier. Once the investigator tracks down an account, he flags their content, in the hope that the tech giants who own the platforms will act quickly. "Some companies are brilliant," he says. "Within 24 hours they'll get back to me and go, you know what? We agree and they'll remove that account. "Other companies, if they don't see that perceived risk or that account as being a problem, they'll just say, 'thanks, but we'll leave it'. They will let that account continue." If there is enough evidence, information found online can lead to warrants being carried out on the ground. During a nationwide county lines week of action, I joined GMP officers on a dawn raid in Salford. The operation targeted a county line involving the supply and distribution of popular party drugs like ketamine, cannabis, cocaine and MDMA. Once officers had stormed a flat, they made two arrests, leading a pair of men into a van that was waiting outside. The officer in charge of the warrant on the day said party drugs are an increasing issue in the area, which is popular among young professionals and students. "There are multiple people that are known to us, continuously supplying drugs. We're working hard to disrupt this criminality, executing lots of warrants and getting these guys inside and remanded," he said. "So with ketamine, it's a drug well-used by students, so the younger target market here is rife." 'You can't arrest your way out of people using drugs' The drugs being seized aren't just leading to convictions and custodial sentences. In another element of GMP's drugs strategy, there is a focus on not just enforcement but harm reduction too. GMP works closely with Manchester Drug Analysis and Knowledge Exchange (Mandrake), England's first publicly-funded permanent, city-centre based testing and harm reduction facility. The samples seized by officers on the raids are sent to the Mandrake testing facility at Manchester Metropolitan University so the team there can check exactly what's in circulation on the illegal drugs market. That information is then shared with the police, council and health bodies, so they can issue public warnings. Dr Oliver Sutcliffe, who leads the team at the facility, says that of the 600-700 samples they received for testing in the last 12 months, ketamine is "about the second or third" most seized sample. In the week we filmed with Dr Sutcliffe, Mandrake issued a public health warning about ketamine being contaminated with medetomidine, a high-strength sedative used by vets on large animals. Dr Sutcliffe showed me three samples of ketamine that all look the same, but were actually of different purities. One of them contained medetomidine. "It's an anaesthetic and if you combine that with another aesthetic, then what you get is a synergistic effect. So that enhances the sedation," he said. "And that potentially might put you in positions where if you're more sedated, you might have an accident." Pointing to the three samples, he said: "If you just visually look at the crystals, they are exactly the same, so from a user's point of view, you would not necessarily be able to tell the difference." The route a sample takes from a crime scene to Dr Sutcliffe's lab is perhaps the biggest example of how the police are being forced to change course with a drug like ketamine, which is now so commonplace. DSI Harrop explained how GMP is trying to police the drug differently. He said: "There was a near-fatal overdose yesterday, where some powder was recovered. The people with the individual who is currently in hospital have suggested she may have taken ketamine. "We found some powder, but rather than look to do any kind of prosecution, which I think to some extent is fairly futile, I spoke to the Manchester Met (Manchester Metropolitan University) panel last night and they're going to test those for us." "You can't arrest your way out of people using drugs," he added.

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Bethany Minelle, arts and entertainment reporter
Mar 21
'The idea that it's going to be a bit naff, it's just insane to me': Meet the cast of Saturday Night Live UK

The This Country star is not wrong. Award shows, Comic Relief, the odd stunt soap episode aside, live TV entertainment - away from sport - is vanishingly rare. But that's about to change, with cult US sketch show Saturday Night Live coming to the UK for the first time. The brainchild of US TV executive Lorne Michaels, and running in America for 51 years, a cast of 11 young comics aged between 26 and 36, and 20 writers are about to give the UK the same Saturday Night Live treatment, broadcasting from Television Centre, TC1, west London, each week. As the name suggests, it's absolutely live, there is no autocue, just old-fashioned cue cards. Think the iconic Keira Knightley scene in Love Actually. A man called Wally Feresten was flown over from the US to train cue card handlers for the show, a niche necessity that those behind the show did not feel could not be scrimped on. The show is also written and rewritten up to the moment of broadcast, finessing the content, removing the bits that don't elicit enough of a laugh from the warm-up audience, who watch a dress rehearsal just hours before the show goes to air. 👉 Listen to This Is Why on your podcast app 👈 The cast have to be fleet-footed, flexible and ready to drop a scene, or learn a new one, at a moment's notice. So, could stuff go wrong on the night? And if it does, is it just part of the thrill of live TV? 'In a way mistakes are useful' Dring tells Sky News she is actively embracing the potential for chaos. "I hope so, and I think also to be honest to communicate what the actual show is, which is a live show," she says. "We as a country, we're not used to watching live stuff any more. So, in a way, if the odd thing doesn't go wrong when you're consuming it, you might not necessarily be cognisant of the fact that it is live. In a way, mistakes are useful to communicate what it is." Fellow cast member Al Nash, a stand-up whose online sketches have attracted over 100 million views on social media, says despite the show's glossy appearance, "When I'm doing it, I don't feel like I'm a star… It's kind of ramshackle… "You don't have a chance to think, 'Do I look good right now?' It's just like, get it done, get it over the line." Fast, furious and a little bit chaotic sounds exciting, and for some audience members thrillingly reminiscent of teenage years waking up to the Big Breakfast and wrapping up the week with The Word on a Friday night. 'We've signed a fun contract' But is there a balance between surprising the audience and behaving yourself on live TV? Dring says: "I think it's just following what you find funny, doing due diligence in terms of being considered, not being reckless or careless, but really just following what you think is funny." She adds: "And we've signed a fun contract." Running with it, Nash agrees: "If we dip below a certain amount of fun, there are multiple electrodes on our bodies, and they shock us. If you ever see me on set, go [mimes being electrocuted] then you know that's my own fault". Dring smiles: "And for me that's fun." 'Starmer's Starmer is six out of 10' A brutal six-day work cycle, Monday to Saturday, with Sunday to catch breath, before starting all over again, Nash agrees they've been prepping like athletes. "I'm certainly spending a lot of time doing keepy-uppies… Instead of writing," he says. So, with Trump featuring so heavily in the US version, have the British cast been vying with one another to play Sir Keir Starmer? Apparently not. "People don't have similar casting, so it just kind of comes naturally," says Dring. "And if my Starmer is like a six out of 10…" says Nash, before Dring cuts in, "Starmer's Starmer is a six out of 10…" "All right," says Nash, laughing, "Well, it will just defer to the best person who can do it because I think collectively we want the show to just be as good as it can be." As for naysayers, already predicting a live, late-night show can never work over here on this side of the pond, Dring deflects the negative vibes with aplomb. "I have a certain amount of affection for the pessimism of the British public, I kind of respect it," she says. "I feel all right about that, and we'll do our darnedest." Nash adds: "The idea that it's going to be a bit naff, it's just insane to me, because we're in charge, and we're going to make it good." Forget the fun contract, and bring on the mishaps, as we get ready to embrace a brave new world of British comedy this Saturday night. Saturday Night Live UK starts on Sky and Now on 21 March, hosted by Tina Fey and featuring band Wet Leg. It will stream on Peacock in the US the following night.

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No Writer
Mar 20
Angela Rayner slammed over 'negative intervention' about Labour government

Speaking to Sky News' political editor Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, the veteran Labour peer said Ms Rayner had offered just "one criticism after another" rather than "positive proposals". Politics Hub: Follow the latest "It's so easy to be popular when you are not in the hot seat, and whoever took over from Starmer would face all the same problems," Baroness Harman said. In a speech at an event hosted by campaign group Mainstream on Wednesday, the former deputy prime minister warned Labour was "running out of time". "I'm a big fan of Angela Rayner. I think she's a remarkable woman. I think she energised the party when we were in opposition building up into government," Baroness Harman said. But speaking about Ms Rayner's speech on Wednesday evening, she added: "It didn't have any proposals about what should be done. "I just don't think she should be doing this. I think it's wrong for her and it's certainly wrong for the party and the government. "It's the sort of things that are said by Nigel Farage, by Kemi Badenoch, by the Greens, by the Lib Dems. "I think it's best for you to come forward with positive proposals rather than just criticise a government, which is dealing with a very difficult situation." Read more:Labour's left unit behind 'major reset' call 'Is she saying immigration doesn't matter?' Baroness Harman also said the former deputy prime minister should not "wave" immigration "away" as an issue. "The other thing that I would take issue with Angela Rayner on this is that immigration is now, if you look at the opinion polls and just listen on the doorstep, it's the second most important issue to people after the cost of living," she said. "To just wave it away as an issue and say it's un-British to exercise extra controls… what is she suggesting instead? "Is she saying it doesn't matter that people are concerned about immigration or this is the wrong policy and we should be trying something else?" Baroness Harman said. "It's just a negative intervention."

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No Writer
Mar 22
Lin Yu-ting cleared for World Boxing return in female category after sex test

The 30-year-old from Taiwan was at the centre of a fierce ​gender-eligibility row alongside Algerian Imane ‌Khelif at the Paris Games in 2024, where both ​boxers won Olympic gold. Lin and Khelif had been disqualified from the 2023 World Championships by previous world governing body the International Boxing Association (IBA). Tyson Fury says AJ can be next after Makhmudov: 'Let's get it done!'Dana White 'all in' on Zuffa, credits the UK 'for keeping boxing alive'Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW The IBA was stripped of its status by the International Olympic Committee prior to Paris, where the IOC ran boxing competitions and both Lin and Khelif met the eligibility rules required at the time. World Boxing took over as the sport's governing body last year, and it implemented a sex eligibility policy in August, requiring all fighters to take a one-time genetic test designed to identify the presence of a Y chromosome. Lin has been absent from several international competitions since the introduction of the test but, following an appeal from Taiwan's federation, World Boxing has since announced Lin is eligible to compete - starting with the Asian Boxing Championships in Mongolia from March 29 to April 10. World Boxing didn't specify the results of Lin's test, but said in a statement: "We can confirm that the boxer is eligible to compete in ⁠the female category at World Boxing ​competitions. "(We) ​appreciate the way they have approached ​the appeal process and their acknowledgement of ⁠World Boxing's requirement to ensure that its eligibility policy, which is designed to deliver safety ⁠and sporting integrity, has been ​correctly implemented and followed." Lin and Khelif ​have not competed in official international events since the Olympics, with the latter saying earlier this year she would willing to take World Boxing's new sex test, if it would allow her to defend her Olympic gold at the 2028 Games in Los Angeles.

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