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Oscar-winning Palestinian says home in West Bank raided by Israeli soldiers | West Bank

Palestinian Oscar-winning director Basel Adra has said that Israeli soldiers have conducted a raid at his West Bank home, searching for him and going through his wife’s phone.
Israeli settlers attacked his village on Saturday, injuring two of his brothers and one cousin, Adra told the Associated Press. He accompanied them to the hospital. While there, he said that he heard from family in the village that nine Israeli soldiers had stormed his home.
The soldiers asked his wife, Suha, for his whereabouts and went through her phone, he said, while his nine-month-old daughter was at home. They also briefly detained one of his uncles, he said.
As of Saturday night, Adra said he had no way of returning home to check on his family, because soldiers were blocking the entrance to the village and he was scared of being detained.
Israel’s military said soldiers were in the village after Palestinians had thrown rocks, injuring two Israeli civilians. It said its forces were still in the village, searching the area and questioning people.
Adra has spent his career as a journalist and film-maker chronicling settler violence in Masafer Yatta, the southern reaches of West Bank where he was born.
After settlers attacked his co-director, Hamdan Ballal, in March, he told the AP that he felt they were being targeted more intensely since winning the Oscar.
He described Saturday’s events as “horrific”.
“Even if you are just filming the settlers, the army comes and chases you, searches your house,” he said. “The whole system is built to attack us, to terrify us, to make us very scared.”
Another co-director, Yuval Abraham, said he was “terrified for Basel”.
“What happened today in his village, we’ve seen this dynamic again and again, where the Israeli settlers brutally attack a Palestinian village and later on the army comes, and attacks the Palestinians.”
No Other Land, which won an Oscar this year for best documentary, depicts the struggle by residents of the Masafer Yatta area to stop the Israeli military from demolishing their villages.
allal and Adra made the joint Palestinian-Israeli production with Israeli directors Abraham and Rachel Szor.
The film has won a string of international awards, starting at the Berlin International film festival in 2024. It has also drawn ire in Israel and abroad, as when Miami Beach proposed ending the lease of a cinema that screened the documentary.
Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 six-day war, along with the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem. The Palestinians want all three for their future state and view settlement growth as a major obstacle to a two-state solution.
Israel has built well over 100 settlements, home to more than 500,000 settlers who have Israeli citizenship. The 3 million Palestinians in the West Bank live under seemingly open-ended Israeli military rule, while the western-backed Palestinian Authority administers population centres.
The Israeli military designated Masafer Yatta in the southern West Bank as a live-fire training zone in the 1980s and ordered residents, mostly Arab Bedouin, to be expelled.
About 1,000 residents have largely remained in place, but soldiers regularly move in to demolish homes, tents, water tanks and olive orchards – and Palestinians fear outright expulsion could come at any time.
During the war in Gaza, Israel has killed hundreds of Palestinians in the West Bank during wide-scale military operations, and there has also been a rise in settler attacks on Palestinians. There also has been a surge in Palestinian attacks on Israelis.
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Falcons vs. Vikings: Atlanta keeps J.J. McCarthy, Minnesota out of end zone in strong 22-6 victory

J.J. McCarthy has played eight quarters in the NFL. Seven of them have been bad.
The Vikings’ fourth-quarter comeback in Week 1 was fun, but it masked the other problems that were evident from McCarthy and the offense. The McCarthy we saw from the first three quarters in the opener against the Bears showed up in Week 2. He struggled to complete passes and keep drives going. This time there was no fantastic fourth quarter rally to save the win.
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The Falcons didn’t play well on offense either but they didn’t have to. A deluge of field goals was enough for a 22-6 win against the Vikings, who had a miserable night on offense. McCarthy completed 11-of-21 passes for 158 yards, two interceptions and a fumble lost. The Vikings didn’t score a touchdown.
What looked like a fun Sunday night matchup between second-year quarterbacks Michael Penix Jr. and McCarthy was mostly a slog. It was a lesson that playing quarterback can still be a big challenge in a QB’s first few career starts.
The Falcons’ win was far from an instant classic. But at least it was a win for them. The Vikings have to worry that McCarthy is far behind the curve, and one good quarter didn’t erase that.
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Vikings stall in first half
McCarthy apparently isn’t a fast starter.
For the second straight week, the Vikings’ offense was poor in the first half. As he did in the opener, McCarthy threw an interception. However, the one he threw late in the first half against the Falcons wasn’t returned for a touchdown, like his pick last week against the Bears.
McCarthy was not good through three quarters of the Vikings’ Week 1 game. That was forgotten when he came alive in the fourth quarter and led the Vikings to a win, but the first half Sunday night was another troubling sign for McCarthy. He took five sacks in the first half against a team that has in recent seasons had one of the worst pass rushes in the NFL. He also bobbled a snap on a sneak on fourth-and-inches and was stopped short of the first down. McCarthy finally hit one big play, a 50-yard gain to Justin Jefferson with two seconds left to set up a field goal. The Falcons led 9-6 at halftime.
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Minnesota’s defense, as was the case last week, kept the Vikings in the game. The home crowd helped, too, disrupting the Falcons on their first drive and helping them settle for a field goal. The Falcons couldn’t get in the end zone and Drake London lost a fumble that took more points off the board. Even after the Falcons’ interception off McCarthy in Minnesota territory, all Atlanta could get out of it was a field goal.
It wasn’t a pretty first half for Minnesota. The only good news was that Penix didn’t do more for the Falcons to open up a big lead. Minnesota couldn’t take advantage, as NBC probably saw its viewership numbers drop during an uneventful game.
Falcons pull away
The game didn’t pick up much in the third quarter. The Vikings’ offense continued to stall. The Falcons still were settling for field goals. Atlanta led 12-6 after three quarters.
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The Vikings had another turnover to start the fourth quarter, when Atlanta’s Zach Harrison came unblocked on a rush and hit McCarthy, causing a fumble that the Falcons recovered at the Vikings’ 38-yard line. The Falcons settled for yet another field goal, Parker Romo’s fifth of the night.
There were no signs of life from the Vikings’ offense. Minnesota’s run game didn’t do much to take pressure off McCarthy. He didn’t look comfortable all night, either due to the pressure from the Falcons or not finding any receivers for meaningful completions. When Falcons running back Tyler Allgeier scored the game’s first touchdown with 3:22 left in the fourth quarter, it was officially a rout. At that point McCarthy had completed just nine passes and the Vikings had only 164 yards of offense.
The Vikings are 1-1, and still have time for McCarthy to improve as a passer. But it’s apparent a lot of improvement is needed.
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‘The Late Show with Stephen Colbert’ wins Emmy after CBS cancellation

“The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” won the Emmy for outstanding talk series Sunday for the first time — seven months before it goes off the air.
Colbert, accepting the award to rapturous applause and cheers from the audience inside Los Angeles’ Peacock Theater, thanked the roughly 200 “incredible professionals” who work behind the scenes of the late-night show, which CBS is canceling.
He then reflected more broadly on the legacy of “The Late Show,” saying he originally set out to do a late-night comedy series about “love” and then realized it was actually about “loss.”
“Sometimes, you only know how much you love something when you get a sense you might be losing it. … I have never loved my country more desperately. God bless America.”
“Stay strong and be brave, and if the elevator tries to bring you down, go crazy and punch a higher floor,” Colbert added, paraphrasing the Prince song “Let’s Go Crazy.”
CBS announced in July that it would end “The Late Show” at the conclusion of its current season, which runs through May. In a statement at the time, network executives said the move was “not related in any way to the show’s performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount.”
The other matters included the pending corporate tie-up between Paramount, CBS’ parent company, and Skydance. The merger required approval from the Trump administration’s Federal Communications Commission.
In the wake of the cancellation announcement, many of Colbert’s fans cried foul, arguing he was being penalized for his long history of criticizing President Donald Trump.
Colbert had also mocked Paramount for agreeing to pay $16 million to settle a lawsuit from Trump, who alleged that CBS’ “60 Minutes” had deceptively edited a pre-election interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris.
CBS denied the president’s claim.
Colbert, in his acceptance speech, did not criticize the network he has called home since 2015.
“I want to thank CBS for giving us the privilege to being part of late-night tradition, which I hope continues long after we’re no longer doing this show,” Colbert said.
The other nominees in the talk show category this year were Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” and ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live!”
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Emmys 2025 live updates: Adolescence star Owen Cooper wins
Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen get Bob Hope awardpublished at 03:16 BST
Nardine Saad
Reporting from the Emmy Awards

Husband and wife Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen are receiving the 2025 Bob Hope Humanitarian award for their philanthropy, activism and “unwavering commitment to global good”.
The Cheers and Curb Your Enthusiasm stars are the first couple to be honoured with the award, which was established in 2002 to recognise media figures whose philanthropic efforts reflects the spirit of the late comedian Bob Hope, according to the Television Academy.
The academy describes Danson and Steenburgen, married since 1995, as “two luminaries whose off-screen legacy shines as bright as their decades of celebrated television work”.
Danson, whose other credits include The Good Place and Becker, is a longtime environmentalist and ocean conservation activist. He co-founded the American Oceans Campaign in 1987 and has supported several charities, including the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and the Elton John AIDS Foundation.
Steenburgen, who has starred in Elf and Parenthood and won an Oscar for Melvin and Howard, has worked with Artists for a Free South Africa and No Kid Hungry, and has advocated for more arts funding in US schools.
The couple has long supported LGBTQ+ rights and co-founded the charity Angels at Risk in 2007 to combat drug and alcohol abuse among children, teenagers and their families.
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