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Japan’s Inoue beats Nakatani to retain undisputed super bantamweight title

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Naoya Inoue wins 116-112, 115-113, 116-112 in a fight billed as the biggest boxing match in ​Japanese history.

Japanese boxer ‌Naoya Inoue has retained his undisputed super ⁠bantamweight world ⁠title with a unanimous decision victory over compatriot Junto Nakatani after a gripping 12-round ⁠contest in Tokyo.

Inoue said he was “relieved” to beat Nakatani and stay unbeaten in front of 55,000 fans at a sold-out Tokyo Dome on Saturday.

The 33-year-old, famous as the Monster, extended his winning streak in world ⁠title bouts to 28 as judges scored the fight 116-112, 115-113 and 116-112 in his favour.

“It was different to the fights I’ve had before, with the pressure. So I’m relieved that I won,” Inoue said afterwards.

“I don’t know if tonight was a legendary night or not, but that’s coming soon.

“Tonight isn’t the end point of my boxing career, and there’s still time to create more legendary occasions.”

Both boxers entered the bout unbeaten at 32-0 in a ‌contest billed as the biggest boxing match in Japanese history after Nakatani moved up a division late last year.

Inoue charged early before Nakatani appeared to close the gap in the latter half of the fight as ⁠the pace intensified, but a ⁠clash of heads late in the 10th round opened a cut above the challenger’s eye and stalled his momentum.

“Today I executed ⁠the plan that I’d been saying before the fight, to stay ⁠focused on winning, to make ⁠sure I was the one who came out as the winner,” Inoue said.

“As you all know, Nakatani is a mentally strong ‌boxer. The fact that he is in the [top 10] pound-for-pound rankings makes this win worthwhile.”

The win ‌improved ‌Inoue’s overall record to 33 victories, with 27 knockouts (KOs).

Nakatani, who has held world titles in three different weight classes, was looking to catapult himself into the sport’s top echelons with a win.

Nicknamed “Big Bang”, the 28-year-old regularly features in The Ring magazine’s top 10 pound-for-pound rankings, which rate the world’s best boxers regardless of weight class.

He was fighting only his second bout at super bantamweight, and he used his longer reach to hold Inoue at bay early in the fight.

But he was powerless to prevent his opponent scoring with a series of pinpoint shots, before an accidental headbutt opened up a cut above his eye that troubled him late in the fight.

“I prepared for lots of different eventualities, so I wasn’t really surprised by the way he fought,” said Nakatani, who saw his record drop to 32-1, with 24 KOs.

“But he fought like a champion, and he’s a great boxer.”

The match was fought in an atmosphere of mutual respect, with both boxers exchanging smiles and fist bumps throughout.

Inoue was fighting at the Tokyo Dome for the second time, having beaten Mexico’s Luis Nery there in May 2024.

The area around the stadium was thronged with fans hours before the doors opened.

The atmosphere reached fever pitch when Inoue and Nakatani made their entrances for a landmark bout in Japanese boxing.

“The view I had from the ring was one that only I could savour, but it was thanks to the 55,000 people in the stadium that I was able to see it,” Inoue said.

“I will be back at the Tokyo Dome, so please let me savour this view again.”

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/sports/2026/5/3/japans-inoue-beats-nakatani-to-retain-undisputed-super-bantamweight-title?traffic_source=rss

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Taiwan leader visits Eswatini despite China’s attempts to block trip

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President William Lai Ching-te says he met King Mswati III and signed trade agreements.

Taiwan President William Lai Ching-te says his government will never give up on engaging with the world as he visited Eswatini despite China’s efforts to block the trip.

Lai arrived in Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland, on Saturday after “meticulous arrangements made by our diplomatic and national security teams”, he said in a Facebook post, although it is unclear how he arrived in the kingdom.

He said he was greeted with a “military-style welcoming ceremony”. Taiwan’s leader said he met with King Mswati III and signed trade agreements.

The trip was originally scheduled for late April, but Seychelles, Mauritius and Madagascar cancelled flight permits for his charter plane without notice.

Taiwan’s presidential office said the cancellations came after heavy pressure from Beijing, including economic coercion, and it called the move “without precedent in the international community”.

Taiwan operates as a self-governing democracy, but China claims it is part of its territory and says it must come under its rule. Beijing has insisted that countries halt engagements with the island’s government.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson called the trip a “laughable stunt” and said Lai used a “foreign plane to “smuggle” himself out of the island”, insisting that Taiwan is a part of China.

China has spent decades pressuring countries to sever formal ties with Taipei, leaving Taiwan with only 12 diplomatic allies, which include Belize, Guatemala, Haiti and the Vatican.

Although the United States doesn’t recognise Taiwan, it has pledged to help Taipei defend itself under the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act.

Eswatini is the only country on the African continent that still recognises Taiwan.

Lai thanked its king for standing with Taiwan “undeterred by various diplomatic and economic pressures” and reiterated that no country has the right to prevent Taiwan from contributing to the world.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/3/taiwan-leader-visits-eswatini-despite-chinas-attempts-to-block-trip?traffic_source=rss

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China blocks US sanctions against five ‘teapot’ refineries

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Ministry of Commerce says sanctions against refineries accused of importing Iranian oil violate international law.

China has announced an injunction to block US sanctions placed on five Chinese refiners accused ‌of buying oil from Iran.

The US sanctions announced by the Department of the Treasury late last month bar the refiners from the US financial system and seek to penalise anyone doing business with the firms.

In a statement on Saturday, China’s Ministry of Commerce said the sanctions “improperly” restrict business between Chinese enterprises and third countries “in violation of international law and the basic norms governing international relations”.

The Commerce Ministry said it had issued a “prohibition order” stipulating that the sanctions “shall not be recognized, enforced, or complied with,” calling the order a move to “safeguard national sovereignty, security, and development interests”.

“The Chinese government has consistently opposed unilateral sanctions that lack UN authorisation and basis in international law,” the ministry added.

It said the order blocked US measures against Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery and four other so-called “teapot” refineries: Shandong Jincheng Petrochemical Group, Hebei Xinhai Chemical Group, Shouguang Luqing Petrochemical and Shandong ⁠Shengxing Chemical.

Announcing the sanctions on April 24, the US Treasury Department called Hengli “one of Tehran’s most valued customers”, saying it had generated hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for the Iranian military through crude oil purchases.

The Trump administration imposed sanctions on the other four refineries named by the Chinese ministry, among other facilities, last year.

China gets more than half of its oil from the Middle East, much of it from Iran.

According to commodities data firm Kpler, China bought more than 80 percent of the oil Iran shipped in 2025.

China’s “teapot” refineries operate independently and are generally smaller than the facilities run by state-owned oil giants, such as Sinopec.

The facilities, which have been crucial to China’s efforts to secure its oil supplies, capitalise on heavily discounted crude sold by countries under sanctions, such as Iran, Russia and Venezuela.

Teapots account for a quarter of Chinese ⁠refinery capacity, operate with narrow and sometimes negative margins, and have been squeezed recently by tepid domestic demand.

US sanctions have created additional hurdles for refiners, including difficulties selling refined products under their correct place-of-origin markings.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/5/3/china-blocks-us-sanctions-against-five-teapot-refineries?traffic_source=rss

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Iran war: What’s happening on day 65 as Trump reviews new plan to end war?

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Iran has sent the US a new 14-point proposal to end the war.

United States President Donald Trump says he will review the latest Iranian proposal to end the war but has expressed doubt that the new plan will lead to a deal as the two sides have escalated their rhetoric.

Tehran has sent a 14-point plan to Washington, calling for guarantees of nonaggression, sanctions relief, the lifting of a naval blockade and an end to the war “on all fronts”, including in Lebanon. This proposal seeks to postpone nuclear talks to a later stage, an issue Trump has considered a “red line”.

Despite the diplomatic opening, the US president did not rule out the possibility of renewed hostilities. “If they do something bad, there is a possibility it could happen,” Trump said.

The Iranians have also fired back with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) saying it is on standby for a return to war.

Here is what we know as the conflict enters day 65:

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/3/iran-war-whats-happening-on-day-65-as-trump-reviews-new-plan-to-end-war?traffic_source=rss

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