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Real Madrid will bring Mourinho back if Perez is re-elected

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Real Madrid president Florentino Perez says he will bring Jose Mourinho back as manager if he wins Sunday’s election.

Jose ‌Mourinho will return to manage Real Madrid if Florentino Perez wins ⁠the club’s presidential ⁠election on Sunday, the sitting president has declared as he campaigns for another term at the helm of the La Liga ⁠club.

Perez, facing renewable energy entrepreneur Enrique Riquelme in the club’s first contested election in 20 years, delivered the campaign announcement on his social media ⁠channels with a short video featuring Mourinho simply saying “Yes!”

The clip followed the slogan “So MOUch history to be made”, a not-so-subtle nod to the Portuguese coach who guided Real to a record La Liga points tally in 2012, but last lifted ‌a league title with Chelsea in 2015.

The move for Mourinho follows a disappointing domestic campaign in which Barcelona secured back-to-back league titles.

Real, 15-time Champions League winners, have also exited Europe’s top club competition at the quarterfinal stage in the last two seasons, with the absence of major silverware prompting Perez to call elections.

Perez’s announcement landed while Riquelme was ⁠appearing on Spanish television programme El Hormiguero, in which he ⁠said Manchester City midfielder and Spain captain Rodri would be his first signing if elected.

He said he would also target Manchester City striker Erling Haaland, and that former forward and ⁠club great Raul would be his sports director.

Since leaving Chelsea, Mourinho’s trophy haul has been more modest. He ⁠won the League Cup and Europa League with ⁠Manchester United, and later led AS Roma to the third-tier Conference League title.

His managerial road has also taken him to Tottenham Hotspur, Fenerbahce and Benfica, where he was under contract until ‌June 2027 and had said the Portuguese club had proposed a renewal.

While pundits argue that the game has moved beyond Mourinho’s pragmatic style, Perez appears ‌to ‌see him as the manager to restore discipline and edge to a squad featuring Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Jr and Jude Bellingham.

Mourinho previously stated that no contact had been made with Real, despite heavy reports linking him with a return to the Bernabeu.

Should Perez win the election, Mourinho would return to the club 13 years after his departure in 2013.

Mourinho first joined Real Madrid in 2010, spending three seasons at the club.

During his tenure, he won one La Liga title, a Copa del Rey and a Spanish Super Cup.

Xabi Alonso was sacked by Real in January, in his first season in charge of the Madrid club, while Alvaro Arbeloa carried the team to the end of the season as interim coach.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/sports/2026/6/3/real-madrid-will-bring-mourinho-back-if-perez-is-re-elected?traffic_source=rss

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Lufthansa employees injured after Boeing 787 collapses in Frankfurt

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Lufthansa employees injured after Boeing 787 collapses in Frankfurt

Several Lufthansa staff members were injured when the nose gear of a Boeing 787 jetliner collapsed while the plane was at the gate at Frankfurt airport on Thursday. Crew members and ground staff were on the aircraft, but the company says passengers had not yet boarded.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/video/newsfeed/2026/6/4/lufthansa-employees-injured-after-boeing-787-collapses-in-frankfurt?traffic_source=rss

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What is the UK’s ‘two-tier policing’ debate?

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The murder of Henry Nowak sparked a political storm in the UK, with Britain’s far right making renewed claims of ‘two-tier policing’. But what evidence exists for the claim, and what have official investigations into British policing concluded?

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/video/newsfeed/2026/6/4/what-is-the-uks-two-tier-policing-debate?traffic_source=rss

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US defence secretary compares Bolivia protests to government ‘overthrow’

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The Trump administration has supported Bolivian President Rodrigo Paz after his electoral victory over the left-wing Movement for Socialism.

The administration of United States President Donald Trump has issued a statement appearing to characterise the anti-government protests in Bolivia as an attempted coup against the country’s right-wing president.

On Thursday, US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth posted on social media that the US military establishment would “reject all attempts to overthrow the legitimate government” of Bolivian President Rodrigo Paz.

He then proceeded to suggest that the protesters — many of whom are teachers, miners, farmers and union workers — are in league with “narco-terrorists”, the Trump administration’s term for drug traffickers.

“The United States is watching. Bolivia must not allow itself to fall prey to the old status quo of narco-terrorist dominance in the region,” Hegseth wrote.

The message was the latest indication that the Trump administration plans to continue taking an active role in Latin American politics and security.

Since returning to the presidency for a second term in 2025, Trump has outlined an expansionist plan for the US, and his administration has described the entire Western Hemisphere as its “neighbourhood” to patrol.

“This is OUR Hemisphere, and President Trump will not allow our security to be threatened,” the State Department posted in January.

The Trump administration has also designated multiple criminal networks in Latin America as “terrorist” organisations.

Earlier this year, Trump established a security initiative called the Americas Counter Cartel Coalition (A3C), under the umbrella of the Shield of the Americas, to bring together right-wing governments from across the region to collaborate on issues like crime and security.

Paz, the Bolivian president, was among the leaders to attend the A3C’s inaugural summit in March.

But domestically, his government has faced a rocky start. Paz was elected in Bolivia’s presidential run-off in October, marking the end of nearly two decades of governance from the Movement for Socialism (MAS).

His administration quickly moved to restore ties with the US, after they were severed in 2008 over disputes about the US’s aggressive anti-drug policy and other issues.

Bolivia is the third largest producer of coca, the raw material for the drug cocaine, but the crop also has uses in traditional medicine and Andean ceremony. Unions of coca farmers continue to be a powerful political force in the country.

Some of Paz’s early moves, however, have alarmed that constituency. In May, for example, his government was forced to revoke a land reform law, Ley 1720, that farmers feared would allow their small plots to be converted to larger land holdings.

Paz’s decision to nix fuel subsidies sparked public backlash, too, as petrol prices rose. Bolivia’s economy has been in turmoil for years, as foreign currency reserves dwindle, alongside its exports of natural gas, a major local commodity.

Since May, protesters have filled streets across Bolivia, blockading roadways and clashing with law enforcement.

Some demonstrators have called for Paz’s resignation, citing the popular discontent, though officials in his administration have rejected the possibility outright.

Facing the public unrest, Paz has reshuffled his cabinet and pledged to take a 50-percent pay cut.

On May 27, Bolivia’s legislature gave the green light for the military to deploy against the protesters, in a bid to clear the blockades. But the protests have continued to grind on.

The Trump administration, which has encouraged Latin American governments to take more hardline measures to confront drug trafficking, offered Paz its support on Thursday.

“We will continue to support our A3C partners like Bolivia to ensure that narco-terrorists are deterred from profiting on death and destruction in our hemisphere,” Hegseth said.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/6/4/us-defence-secretary-compares-bolivia-protests-to-government-overthrow?traffic_source=rss

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