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No Writer
Feb 27
UFOs and Pizzagate: Hillary Clinton attacks line of questioning over Epstein

The former US secretary of state was compelled to appear before the US House Oversight Committee in New York and asked about the disgraced financier. After the deposition, she told reporters: "I thought it was very repetitive... they asked literally the same questions over and over again, which didn't seem to me to be very productive. "I did not know Jeffrey Epstein. I never went to his island. I never went to his homes. I never went to his offices." She then added that the questions became more bizarre and "off subject". She said: "It then got, at the end, quite unusual, because I started being asked about UFOs and a series of questions about Pizzagate, one of the most vile, bogus conspiracy theories that was propagated on the internet." Pizzagate was a conspiracy theory used to smear Clinton when she ran as the Democrat candidate at the 2016 US election. The long-debunked theory alleged high-profile Democrats ran a paedophile abuse ring from a Washington pizza restaurant. At one point, Ms Clinton's testimony in New York was suspended after a photograph of her at the committee was published on social media, violating the rules for depositions. The image was posted on X by Benny Johnson, a right-wing political commentator and YouTuber, claiming it was provided to him by Republican representative Lauren Boebert. Sky News's US correspondent James Matthews said Ms Clinton made a "blistering attack" on the oversight committee, which she accused of "partisan political theatre" and "alleging a cover-up to protect Donald Trump". In an opening statement, which she shared on social media, she said the committee "run by elected officials with a commitment to transparency would ensure the full release of all the files... if it wanted to get to the bottom of reports that DoJ [Department of Justice] withheld FBI interviews in which a survivor accuses President Trump of heinous crimes". She claimed she was being compelled to testify "to distract attention from President Trump's actions". Democrats claim material from the Epstein files was withheld, including records of a woman who accused the president of sexually abusing her when she was a child. Mr Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing. Ms Clinton said Epstein was a "heinous individual" but is "far from alone", calling the crimes he committed a "global scourge with an unimaginable human toll". Meanwhile, Democrats on the House Oversight Committee have been backing Ms Clinton, and criticised the leak of a photo from inside the deposition. Congresswoman Yassamin Ansari described the deposition as an "incredibly unserious clown show". Fellow Democrat Robert Garcia also spoke to call for President Trump to testify: "We want to understand right now where the missing FBI files are. "These are files that accuse the president of the United States about serious, serious accusations around sexual abuse," he said. Donald Trump has denied all accusations of wrongdoing, saying the Epstein files exonerated him. Read more from Sky News:Chance of US attack on Iran recedesZelenskyy: 'I'm not the best father'Afghanistan strikes Pakistan Hillary Clinton, and her husband Bill, agreed to appear before the committee after their offers of sworn statements were rejected by the House Oversight panel. Mr Clinton's testimony on Friday will be the first time a former president has been forced to testify before Congress. A close friend and former aide of the Clintons has told Sky News that Republicans have "created a trap" for Donald Trump by enforcing a summons on Bill Clinton to testify about Jeffrey Epstein. Sidney Blumenthal said the Democrats will surely respond by forcing Mr Trump to testify himself "if and when" they take control of Congress. He says cabinet members such as Howard Lutnick, commerce secretary, and Pam Bondi, attorney general, could also be called to testify, as could Melania Trump over her previous relationship with Epstein co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell.

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Katie Spencer, arts and entertainment correspondent
Feb 26
The UK's delicate deal to get the Bayeux Tapestry loaned from France - a diplomatic coup or cultural gamble?

Nearly a thousand years old, the tapestry is one of the earliest visual stories in Europe. A medieval graphic novel, if you like, that's shaped how we remember 1066 and how William the Conqueror came from France to become King of England. And it is big, wider than a football field. The 11th-century masterpiece is being loaned from France and will feature in an exhibition at the British Museum from September. So forget about Taylor Swift or Oasis - insiders are anticipating a Glastonbury-esque fight to get hold of tickets. "Next year we are expecting 7.5m visitors," George Osborne, chair of the British Museum, tells Sky News. "That's more than the entire 270-odd year history of the British Museum." The state-to-state loan should, according to the museum's director Nicholas Cullinan, be viewed as an international event which "shows that culture can bring people together". But while it is without question a bit of a diplomatic coup, the decision to move the fragile Norman masterpiece in the first place is a contentious one. 'You don't play with this kind of masterpiece' From 2005 to 2010, Isabelle Attard was the director of the Bayeux Tapestry Museum in France. A former Green party deputy in the French National Assembly, she feels French President Emmanuel Macron's decision to loan the masterpiece is a "joke". "I am not sure that everybody understands how fragile the tapestry is," she says. "Emmanuel Macron [has] never cared about the advice and the opinion of the people who specialise in textile preservation. "You just don't play with this kind of masterpiece because it's not replaceable. What surprised me is that curators in the British Museum can just see [the tapestry] like a normal item. It's not the case." Attard's sentiment is shared by renowned British artist David Hockney who, in an an op-ed for The Independent, said that "some things are too precious to take a risk with", and warned moving it could cause "fibre contraction or expansion or colour fading", all for "the vanity of a museum". The British Museum has repeatedly insisted it is experienced at moving precious artefacts internationally and that it isn't taking the fragility of the tapestry for granted. "A museum's primary concern is to look after objects either in its care or on loan and we send around 3,000 objects every year," says Cullinan. "We have incredible conservation staff to do this every day. "Of course, the tapestry is supremely important. There's a degree of fragility, but the reality is much more fragile things travel all the time." Secret 'dummy runs' to test route For security reasons, the museum cannot say when the tapestry is being transported to London. We do know that it's being driven over on a lorry, going by road and rail, with secret "dummy runs" of the route taking place. And it has already been moved a short distance. When its official home in Bayeux closed for refurbishment last September, 80 people helped concertina it up, moving it first on to rails before it was covered with cotton wrapping and put into a storage box. While great care will be taken, not everyone is convinced that the move is worth the risk. More than 77,000 people have signed a French petition calling it a crime against their heritage. In Bayeux, while some locals were in favour of it at least going on show again somewhere, others told us they were worried. "It's a disgrace... there's no reason to let them have it," one man from the town, called Joel, told us. "We don't know what condition it'll be returned in." Julie, a younger cafe worker, says it feels "frustrating", and that "when you read the specialists' studies, they mostly say it's not in a condition to travel right now". Is the risk worth the reward? But Dr David Musgrove, author of The Story of the Bayeux Tapestry: Unravelling The Norman Conquest, says it is "a question of risk and reward". He concedes that the item is fragile, but says: "The reward is that actually it gives it a long-term survival boost because it means everyone is going to be aware of it. It's giving it massive media attention." Chancellor Rachel Reeves has agreed to sign off on indemnity paperwork which effectively means British taxpayers will stump up anything up to £800m should anything go wrong with the move. As a former chancellor himself, Osborne says this is standard practice. "I'm really grateful to the government... and Rachel Reeves for signing the indemnity on behalf of everyone," he says. "It's the taxpayer who stands behind this, but that's not unusual." Lord Peter Ricketts, envoy for the Bayeux Tapestry loan, firmly believes the move is a cause for celebration. "Rightly the French are very concerned to make sure that it comes over here and it goes back, and we've promised it will go back in the same condition it arrived," he says. "I think after Brexit, Macron was looking for a way to really remind people that UK-French relations are important and they go deep into the culture of both countries." And... what about the Elgin Marbles? While the British Museum is understandably delighted to accept the loan on behalf of the UK, a handful of countries, such as Greece, will also be watching what's happening rather closely. Could such a loan pave the way for the Parthenon sculptures, also known as the Elgin Marbles, to return home to Greece? "I'm engaged with the Greek government," Osborne says. "I would love there to be, an exchange. It's hard to get everything right and hard to get everything aligned, but I'm really working hard to try and pull it off." The Bayeux Tapestry will open in early September, with general admission tickets on sale from 1 July.

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No Writer
Feb 26
Assisted dying bill will almost certainly fail due to a lack of time

The Labour chief whip in the Lords, Roy Kennedy, said this week that the government would not give the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill more time before the May deadline, when all legislation must have passed or automatically falls. The team behind the bill also confirmed they now expected the legislation in its current form to fail. There are six remaining sitting days left before May, when the King's Speech happens, and the government is not repeating what it did in December by giving more time. Politics latest - follow live Advocates for the bill did not blame the government, which it said had been helpful to date, and instead aimed their fire on a minority of peers who have been asking thousands of questions about the details of the bill. Broadcaster and campaigner Esther Rantzen told Sky News: "This is absolute blatant sabotage. This is a handful of peers putting down 1,200 amendments not to scrutinise the bill, which is their job, but to block it. "A few peers for their own reasons have decided that they're going to stop this going through parliament, and the only way to stop them would be to invoke the Parliament Act, which has happened before, or get rid of the House of Lords - they're clearly not fit for purpose." She said she was still hopeful the change would come, as there is a rising cry for reform all around the world. She paid tribute to Sir Keir Starmer, who favours a change in the law, and said he had done everything he promised her before the election. Frank Sutton, who has terminal cancer and wants to choose how she dies, told Sky News: "I don't want to die without dignity, without it being my choice, without my family knowing that this is what I want." Dr Gordon McDonald, chief executive of Care Not Killing, which is opposed to assisted dying, told Sky News: "This issue is very difficult, and it needs proper scrutiny - that's what the members of the House of Lords have been doing. "It didn't get proper scrutiny in the House of Commons. It's right that parliaments look at these bills properly and give them due consideration, that's what the House of Lords is doing." Many members of the public and even MPs were unaware that the bill was likely to fail. Earlier this week, the Welsh Parliament approved a "legislative consent order", endorsing in theory the legislation that it expected to come out of Parliament. The debate will now focus on what happens after May, with proponents of a change in the law saying the public polling and the repeated backing of MPs means that this legislation should be given a second chance. However, the government is likely to continue keeping the issue at arms length, since there is no single cabinet position on the issue and members of the cabinet like Wes Streeting and Shabana Mahmood are implacably hostile to the change. This makes a change in the law much more tricky. Some MPs who backed the bill in its Commons stages have told Sky News the process was so torturous that they would not want a repeat of it. Supporters have suggested that you would not have to go through the entire process - avoiding committee stage if the same bill was resurrected - and the Commons stages could in theory be done in one day, and the Parliament Act then deployed to override the objections in the Lords. However, the more turbulent political context for the government, the bandwidth that even this would occupy in government, and the fact the reforms would not be complete before a general election, mean that this would be a significantly bigger challenge second time around.

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No Writer
Feb 26
Europa League and Conference League: Aston Villa, Nottingham Forest and Crystal Palace to learn last-16 opponents in Friday's draw

How do the draws work? Both draws will take place on Friday, with the Europa League from 12pm and the Conference League from 1pm. Follow live coverage of the draw on Friday on the Sky Sports website and app. Every team's potential opponents for the next round has already been narrowed down to two possibilities. Teams can play opponents from their own country and opponents they have already faced in the competition. However, the sides that did not require a play-off will be seeded, meaning they get to play the second leg of their last-16 ties at home. Europa League fixtures | Conference League fixturesGot Sky? Watch Premier League games LIVE on your phone📱Which teams will be in the draw? Europa League Seeded (finished top eight in the league phase) LyonAston VillaMidtjyllandReal BetisPortoBragaFreiburgRoma Unseeded (knockout play-off winners) Nottingham ForestLillePanathinaikosFerencvarosStuttgartBolognaCelta VigoGenk Conference League Seeded (finished top eight in the league phase) StrasbourgRakowAEK AthensSparta PragueRayo VallecanoShakhtar DonetskMainzAEK Larnaca Unseeded (knockout play-off winners) Crystal PalaceFiorentinaNK CeljeRijeka SamsunsporAZ AlkmaarSigma OlomoucLech PoznanWho the English sides could face next Aston Villa: Celta Vigo or PAOKNottingham Forest: Real Betis or MidtjyllandCrystal Palace: Mainz or AEK Larnaca When English sides could meet With the midweek play-offs concluding, English teams know they will face one of two opponents but do not know their individual pathways until the draw is made. The earliest two English teams could face each other is the quarter-finals of the Europa League between Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest. Crystal Palace do not have any potential English opponents in the Conference League. When will fixture dates be announced? The round-of-16 match schedule will be available on Friday evening. The quarter-final match schedule will be confirmed on March 19, while the semi-final schedule will be communicated on April 16. What happened in the knockout play-offs? Celta Vigo beat PAOK 3-1 on aggregate, winning 1-0 in their Europa League play-off second leg, while Lille bounced back from losing the first leg to win 2-0 at Red Star Belgrade. Robbie Keane's Ferencvaros also overturned a one-goal first-leg deficit to win 2-0 at home and knock out Ludogorets Razgrad. Despite losing 1-0 at home to Celtic, Stuttgart also went through 4-2 on aggregate. Panathinaikos beat Viktoria Plzen 4-3 on penalties after a 1-1 draw in the second leg made it 3-3 on aggregate. Nottingham Forest lost 2-1 at home to Fenerbahce but progressed 4-2 on aggregate with Callum Hudson-Odoi's second-half goal proving crucial. Bologna beat 10-man Brann 1-0 on the night and 2-0 on aggregate. Genk survived a fightback from Dinamo Zagreb who, having scored three times to make it 3-1 on the night and 4-4 on aggregate, then had Luka Stojkovic sent off in extra-time either side of the home side scoring twice. When are the 2025/26 knockout stages? Europa League Round of 16 draw: February 27Round of 16: March 12 and 19Quarter-finals: April 9 and 16Semi-finals: April 30 and May 7Final: May 20 Conference League Round of 16 draw: February 27Round of 16: March 12 and 19Quarter-finals: April 9 and 16Semi-finals: April 30 and May 7 MayFinal: May 27 Where are the finals? The Europa League final will be held at Besiktas Park in Istanbul on May 20. The Conference League final will be one week later at the Leipzig Stadium on May 27.

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No Writer
Feb 27
'I'm not the best father,' admits Volodymyr ​Zelenskyy as president says Ukraine hit by harshest winter for decades'

Speaking to international correspondent, Alex Rossi, Volodymyr ​Zelenskyy also praised the work of civilians to fix Ukraine's energy systems after repeated Russian attacks, amid an extremely harsh winter. On Thursday, he said Russia launched 420 drones ‌and 39 missiles, injuring dozens ‌of people and damaging buildings. Ukraine war latest: Moscow 'divides' coalition of the willing During the interview in Kyiv, Mr Zelenskyy said there were "phenomenal people" who were repairing power supplies amid a "very difficult" winter. "I mean, this was the harshest winter for a couple of decades... minus 20... at night minus 30. "But it doesn't matter, day or night, because if you don't have heating, it's difficult during the day, during the night... because minus 30 is so difficult, [a] big challenge for our people," he said. Speaking in English, the president talked about the sacrifices made by civilians to keep the lights on. "Also with civilians, who are really very helpful during this war... we had absolutely heroic teams who renovated electricity, energy system and also we had losses because they did it [repairs] under missile attacks," he said. Read more from Sky News:The hunt for Russia's shadow fleetUkrainian family denied UK asylumUkraine teens on life in a war zone But Mr Zelenskyy also accepted that his presidential role and responsibilities had taken their toll on his family. "During the war, I'm not the best father... because I don't have too much time for my children. "I'm the president of Ukraine, I don´t compare my job... because my choice... is duty. My choice is Ukraine. That's why I said I'm no good father during the war." Separately, Ukrainian and US officials met in Geneva on Thursday for talks on post-war reconstruction despite a deadlock in peace negotiations with Russia. Mr Zelenskyy confirmed the next ‌round of US-brokered ​peace negotiations will likely ​take place in Abu ​Dhabi ⁠in early ⁠March. Ukrainian ‌negotiator Rustem Umerov also said negotiators ​were working on finalising ⁠economic and security issues to "make the ⁠next trilateral ​meeting involving the US and ​Russia as substantive as possible".

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Gemma Peplow, culture and entertainment reporter
Feb 25
BBC investigating 'serious mistake' after racial slur shouted during BAFTAs broadcast

John Davidson, who suffers from the neurological condition, yelled out as the first award of the night was presented at London's Royal Festival Hall by Sinners stars Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo. The BAFTAs programme was edited down from the three-hour live show filmed two hours earlier that evening, and went out on BBC1 at 7pm. Viewers were able to see the offending moment on BBC iPlayer for more than 12 hours before the programme was pulled to be edited. After this, they saw the message: "This episode will be available soon." A BBC spokesperson said: "The BBC has been reviewing what happened at BAFTA on Sunday evening. "This was a serious mistake and the director-general has instructed the Executive Complaints Unit (ECU) to complete a fast-tracked investigation and provide a full response to complainants." Later on Wednesday, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said she shared the "serious concerns raised by so many people" following the broadcast and had spoken to outgoing BBC director-general Tim Davie about the issue. "Broadcasting a racial slur is completely unacceptable and harmful," she said. "The BBC must ensure that this never happens again." The BBC apologised earlier this week and said the slur had been missed and "aired in error". During the BAFTAs broadcast, the ceremony's presenter Alan Cumming apologised for the language viewers may have heard. Both Lindo and Jordan appeared to pause after the insult was heard, then continued their presentation. Davidson, who was attending the ceremony as the inspiration behind the film I Swear, which dramatises his life, said he is "deeply mortified" his involuntary tics caused him to blurt out the offensive language. The backlash to the incident overshadowed the film's success at the ceremony, with relative newcomer Robert Aramayo, who plays Davidson, taking home the best actor award over the likes of Oscar favourite Timothee Chalamet and Hollywood royalty Leonardo DiCaprio. Have lessons been learned? The BBC's investigation announcement on Wednesday came as the Culture, Media and Sport Committee (CMS) wrote to outgoing director-general Tim Davie "seeking an explanation" for how the racial slur ended up in the broadcast "in spite of a two-hour time delay". Chairwoman Dame Caroline Dinenage referenced the broadcaster's coverage of last year's Glastonbury festival, when punk-rap duo Bob Vylan's set went out on live stream. "This latest incident raises questions about the extent to which lessons have been learned and about the controls and systems you have in place to prevent such incidents," Dame Caroline said. She asked the BBC what "specific systems" it had in place to prevent broadcasting of offensive language, and why they "failed" this time. BAFTA's apology BAFTA apologised "unreservedly" to Jordan and Lindo, as well as "all those impacted". "During the ceremony, John chose to leave the auditorium and watch the rest of the ceremony from a screen, and we would like to thank him for his dignity and consideration of others on what should have been a night of celebration for him," the organisation said in a statement. "We take full responsibility for putting our guests in a very difficult situation and we apologise to all. We will learn from this and keep inclusion at the core of all we do, maintaining our belief in film and storytelling as a critical conduit for compassion and empathy." Read more:On the trail of Putin's 'shadow fleet'The Mexican villa where drug lord spent final hours In an interview with US entertainment outlet Variety, Davidson said the BBC should have "worked harder" to ensure his slur was not broadcast. "BAFTA had made us all aware that any swearing would be edited out of the broadcast," he said. "I have made four documentaries with the BBC in the past and feel that they should have been aware of what to expect from Tourette's, and worked harder to prevent anything that I said - which, after all, was some 40 rows back from the stage - from being included in the broadcast." On Tuesday, Labour MP Dawn Butler wrote to the BBC and said the broadcast was "painful and unforgivable". Meanwhile, filmmaker Jonte Richardson said he was stepping down as a BAFTA emerging talent judge over the organisation's handling of the incident.

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No Writer
Feb 26
Police apologise to second parliamentary Speaker in two days over Mandelson arrest leak

Michael Forsyth, the Lord Speaker of the House of Lords, was named in reports as having warned the police that Lord Mandelson was going to flee to the British Virgin Islands. It was actually Sir Lindsay Hoyle, the speaker of the House of Commons, who had. Lord Mandelson was arrested on Monday on suspicion of misconduct in public office, regarding his time as business secretary in Gordon Brown's cabinet in the 2000s. He went with police from his home in Camden, north London, at about 4.15pm on Monday to a police station, where he was questioned for eight hours before being released on bail just after 1am. Lord Mandelson was seen on Thursday for the first time since returning home from his arrest, appearing stony-faced as he left his house just after 1pm and returned at about 4pm. The former Labour peer denies any wrongdoing. It emerged on Tuesday that he was arrested because police had been told he was a flight risk. However, the wrong Speaker was named as the source of the claim. After Lord Forsyth was named, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, the House of Commons Speaker, told MPs on Wednesday morning it was actually he who had warned the police after he was passed the information while he was on holiday in the British Virgin Islands last week. The Met apologised to Sir Lindsay on Wednesday, saying it had "inadvertently" revealed information about why Lord Mandelson had been taken into custody. Read more:Mandelson's 'vile' Epstein emails make me 'angry' - foreign secretary'No proper vetting' of 'Trump whisperer' Mandelson Now, the force has apologised to Lord Forsyth as well. A spokesperson said on Thursday: "The Met has also apologised to the Speaker of the House of Lords, following the inadvertent revealing of information into allegations of misconduct in public office." Lawyers for Lord Mandelson denied the "baseless" allegation that he was going to flee, and said he had already agreed to attend a voluntary interview in a fortnight's time. They have also asked the Met for the "evidence relied upon to justify the arrest". Lord Mandelson was sacked as British ambassador to the US in September after it emerged he remained in close contact with billionaire Jeffrey Epstein after his conviction for paedophilia. Sir Keir Starmer has said the former minister lied to him as part of the vetting process. At the beginning of this month, the US Department of Justice released another tranche of Epstein emails, which revealed how close their relationship was. Lord Mandelson resigned from the Labour Party to avoid causing "further embarrassment", then stepped down from the House of Lords - but he remains a Lord in name as peerages can only be taken away through an Act of Parliament.

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No Writer
Feb 26
Conor Benn vs Regis Prograis to be on Tyson Fury vs Arslanbek Makhmudov undercard

The announcement follows Benn's industry-shaking decision to sever ties with Eddie Hearn's Matchroom Boxing and join Zuffa, the new promotion run by UFC boss Dana White. Benn's first fight under the new arrangement will see him return to the scene of his victory over Chris Eubank Jr to take on two-time super-lightweight world champion Prograis, 30-3 (24). Conor Benn makes big career switch for 'legacy fights'Fury to train himself for comeback: 'I might retire again after this!'Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW Benn said: "April 11 can't come soon enough, returning to Tottenham Hotspur Stadium again, where I made history against Eubank Jr means everything to me. "My last fight there showed the world exactly who I am and what I'm about. Fighting on the biggest stages, in the biggest shows, I fear no one! I'm fully locked in and ready to deliver another statement performance." Two of Prograis' three losses as a professional have come on English soil in world title fights against Josh Taylor in 2019 and Jack Catterall in 2024. Prograis added: "Last time I fought in London, Conor Benn was on my undercard, so this is a full-circle moment for me. "But this circle will close with me teaching him a lesson on April 11. He's not fighting some weight-drained super-middleweight. I am in shape and will bring home this victory." Another surprise? Sky Sports boxing journalist John Dennen says... It's been a busy news week for Conor Benn, and it's still only Thursday. It was a shock to the industry when he made a promotional switch from Matchroom Boxing to new American entity Zuffa. It's also a surprise to see him boxing on an undercard. With Tyson Fury vs Aslanbek Makhmudov the main event on April 11, Benn will be providing the chief support at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. It's a familiar setting for Benn, in his last two fights he headlined at that stadium against Chris Eubank Jr. But playing a supporting role on the bill will be a step down for him. Not necessarily a 'tune up' bout as such - Prograis has a track record of real success - but it will be viewed as a contest to prepare him for a bigger fight later in the year, with Ryan Garcia a particular target for the Ilford fighter. Benn is working his way back down to welter after two consecutive fights at middleweight and he will be the favourite against Prograis. The American was in a sensational fight with Josh Taylor when he lost their super-lightweight world title unification at the O2 Arena. He's only lost to top class opposition, Devin Haney and Jack Catterall as well as Taylor. But Prograis is a former two-time world champion and if he's sharp, he will be dangerous. At 37 though the question is whether he will be. This fight will give us more insights about Benn. Can he make it back to welterweight in good shape, and just how solid a contender will he be there? Benn will start answering those questions against Prograis.

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