Soccer Football -  International Friendly - Scotland v Portugal - Hampden Park, Glasgow, Britain - October 14, 2018  Portugal's Eder celebrates scoring their second goal             Action Images via Reuters/Lee Smith
Eder celebrates scoring his fifth goal for Portugal and first since the winner in the Euro 2016 final. Reuters

Portugal continue to prove there is life without Cristiano Ronaldo after comfortable victory in Scotland



Remove the star and, in theory, the star vehicle should be shorn of direction. In practice, a purposeful Portugal are plotting a successful course without Cristiano Ronaldo.

A comfortable victory in Scotland extended their record since the World Cup to three wins and a draw with the runners-up in Russia, Croatia.

Hampden Park saw a familiar script with an unfamiliar face as Portugal benefited from goals from a winger or two; just not that particular one. The Wolverhampton Wanderers attacker Helder Costa marked his debut country by converting Kevin Rodrigues’ inviting cross. The previously profligate Bruma then scored an emphatic first goal for his country after a pass from the teenage replacement Gedson Fernandes.

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Read more:

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Ian Hawkey: Agony of Amsterdam shows a Germany in crisis, not just a blip

Ian Hawkey: Italy cast envious eye at Poland's strikers as goals continue to prove a problem

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Both are now a mere 84 international goals behind Portugal’s absent captain, but they illustrated that a supposed one-man team can cope without the one man. Indeed, their other scorer offers historic proof of that: Eder mustered just his fifth international goal and his first since he decided Euro 2016.

Portugal won that final without Ronaldo, who limped off in the first half. They have prevailed without him again in Uefa Nations League openers against Italy and Poland. They are on course to reach next summer’s finals. They could yet hold both continental titles at the same time.

Whether their record scorer returns by then is a moot point. Ronaldo missed last month’s internationals as he acclimatised to life at Juventus. He asked to be omitted again this time, though Portugal have not clarified whether it is because of accusations he raped an American woman, Kathryn Mayorga, in Las Vegas in 2009. Ronaldo has insisted he did not.

Others did not take the field in Glasgow for rather different reasons. Fernando Santos made 10 changes; a few months ago, some of this side ranked in Portugal’s third-choice side and Cedric Soares, winning his 33rd cap, was much the most experienced starter.

The result, albeit against a depleted, out-of-form Scotland side, showed Portugal possess strength in depth, but it was also evidence of Santos’ capacity to organise a team and of his side’s winning habit.

Steven Naismith denied Portugal a clean sheet with a well-taken injury-time strike, but they had not conceded when it mattered, though Rodrigues had some difficulties against James Forrest and Sergio Oliveira flirted with an own goal.

Yet the consolation goal should offer little solace after a seventh defeat in nine games. Their difficult start to Alex McLeish’s second spell in charge continues.

With Adrien and Bernardo Silva and Ruben Neves among the rested, Portugal lacked some of their classier performers. They still fashioned fine openings. The RB Leipzig forward Bruma had spurned three chances before half-time and before eventually allying pace and power with precision.

Eder had drawn a save from Craig Gordon before he headed in a free kick taken by the substitute Renato Sanches, whose rehabilitation after a wretched season last year continues.

That improvement could be timely. Despite the cult of personality, Portugal are far more than just Ronaldo. They may need to be.

Forced Deportations

While the Lebanese government has deported a number of refugees back to Syria since 2011, the latest round is the first en-mass campaign of its kind, say the Access Center for Human Rights, a non-governmental organization which monitors the conditions of Syrian refugees in Lebanon.

“In the past, the Lebanese General Security was responsible for the forced deportation operations of refugees, after forcing them to sign papers stating that they wished to return to Syria of their own free will. Now, the Lebanese army, specifically military intelligence, is responsible for the security operation,” said Mohammad Hasan, head of ACHR.
In just the first four months of 2023 the number of forced deportations is nearly double that of the entirety of 2022.

Since the beginning of 2023, ACHR has reported 407 forced deportations – 200 of which occurred in April alone.

In comparison, just 154 people were forcfully deported in 2022.

Violence

Instances of violence against Syrian refugees are not uncommon.

Just last month, security camera footage of men violently attacking and stabbing an employee at a mini-market went viral. The store’s employees had engaged in a verbal altercation with the men who had come to enforce an order to shutter shops, following the announcement of a municipal curfew for Syrian refugees.
“They thought they were Syrian,” said the mayor of the Nahr el Bared municipality, Charbel Bou Raad, of the attackers.
It later emerged the beaten employees were Lebanese. But the video was an exemplary instance of violence at a time when anti-Syrian rhetoric is particularly heated as Lebanese politicians call for the return of Syrian refugees to Syria.

COMPANY PROFILE

Company name: Blah

Started: 2018

Founder: Aliyah Al Abbar and Hend Al Marri

Based: Dubai

Industry: Technology and talent management

Initial investment: Dh20,000

Investors: Self-funded

Total customers: 40

Company Profile

Company name: EduPloyment
Date started: March 2020
Co-Founders: Mazen Omair and Rana Batterjee
Base: Dubai, UAE
Sector: Recruitment
Size: 30 employees
Investment stage: Pre-Seed
Investors: Angel investors (investment amount undisclosed)

Company profile

Company name: Letswork
Started: 2018
Based: Dubai
Founders: Omar Almheiri, Hamza Khan
Sector: co-working spaces
Investment stage: $2.1 million in a seed round with investors including 500 Global, The Space, DTEC Ventures and other angel investors
Number of employees: about 20

BACK TO ALEXANDRIA

Director: Tamer Ruggli

Starring: Nadine Labaki, Fanny Ardant

Rating: 3.5/5

Other key dates
  • Finals draw: December 2
  • Finals (including semi-finals and third-placed game): June 5–9, 2019
  • Euro 2020 play-off draw: November 22, 2019
  • Euro 2020 play-offs: March 26–31, 2020
The Iron Claw

Director: Sean Durkin 

Starring: Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White, Harris Dickinson, Maura Tierney, Holt McCallany, Lily James

Rating: 4/5

1,000 Books to Read Before You Die: A Life-Changing List
James Mustich, Workman

Ways to control drones

Countries have been coming up with ways to restrict and monitor the use of non-commercial drones to keep them from trespassing on controlled areas such as airports.

"Drones vary in size and some can be as big as a small city car - so imagine the impact of one hitting an airplane. It's a huge risk, especially when commercial airliners are not designed to make or take sudden evasive manoeuvres like drones can" says Saj Ahmed, chief analyst at London-based StrategicAero Research.

New measures have now been taken to monitor drone activity, Geo-fencing technology is one.

It's a method designed to prevent drones from drifting into banned areas. The technology uses GPS location signals to stop its machines flying close to airports and other restricted zones.

The European commission has recently announced a blueprint to make drone use in low-level airspace safe, secure and environmentally friendly. This process is called “U-Space” – it covers altitudes of up to 150 metres. It is also noteworthy that that UK Civil Aviation Authority recommends drones to be flown at no higher than 400ft. “U-Space” technology will be governed by a system similar to air traffic control management, which will be automated using tools like geo-fencing.

The UAE has drawn serious measures to ensure users register their devices under strict new laws. Authorities have urged that users must obtain approval in advance before flying the drones, non registered drone use in Dubai will result in a fine of up to twenty thousand dirhams under a new resolution approved by Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai.

Mr Ahmad suggest that "Hefty fines running into hundreds of thousands of dollars need to compensate for the cost of airport disruption and flight diversions to lengthy jail spells, confiscation of travel rights and use of drones for a lengthy period" must be enforced in order to reduce airport intrusion.

Kandahar

Director: Ric Roman Waugh

Stars: Gerard Butler, Navid Negahban, Ali Fazal

Rating: 2.5/5


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