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Town ravaged by wildfire wins €468 million in Spain’s annual Christmas lottery

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Spain’s Christmas lottery has been welcomed as an “injection of hope” in the northwest of the country, where the jackpot handed out hundreds of millions of euros just months after wildfires had caused devastation.

Most of the first-prize-winning tickets in the lottery, known as El Gordo, had been bought by people in small towns in the province of León.

A single ticket, or décimo, costing €20 (£17), is worth €400,000 (£349,484) if it bears the winning number, in this case 79432. Décimos come in strips of 10 and when many strips of the same number are sold to a group of neighbours or workmates, there is potential for a massive jackpot.

People in the town of La Bañeza shared out €468m (£409m).

Among the recipients were members of a local football club in the town, which has a population of around 11,000.

The jackpot came four months after forest fires had torn through León, burning 8,000 hectares (31 sq miles) of land surrounding La Bañeza and killing a local man, 35-year-old Abel Ramos.

The sparsely populated, heavily forested north-west of Spain is used to wildfires, although during this record-breaking year, the area was particularly severely affected. Firefighters battled enormous blazes in León and the neighbouring Galicia region throughout much of August and during the summer 0.8 percent of the country’s total surface area was burned.

According to the mayor of the town, Javier Carrera, the lottery win “means for La Bañeza an injection of excitement and hope,” he told Spanish media. Carrera also mentioned the closure this year of a local sugar-beet factory which caused the loss of dozens of jobs.

Another town in the León province that was heavily affected by the summer’s fires, Villablino, also took a massive share of the jackpot, receiving €200 million (£175m).

“We needed some good news,” said the mayor, Mario Rivas.

On top of the blazes, five local men were killed in two separate mining accidents in nearby Asturias this year.

“It doesn’t make up for the loss of the lives of our friends, but this shows us that there can also be good news,” said Rivas.

Most of the winning tickets in Villablino were sold by a local Alzheimer’s association.

In addition, the town of La Pola de Gordón, also in León and with a population of 3,000, shared out 60 million euros. Sixty-four million euros of jackpot money also went to a working-class district in Madrid.

In Villablino, Maribel Martín had one of the winning décimos, worth €400,000 (£349,484). She was out doing grocery shopping when her son called her to give her the good news.

“We were really down and 200 million euros is a wonderful thing,” she said

She is clear what she wants to do with the prize money. “Spread it around a bit and enjoy life,” she said.

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South Africa secures victory over Angola in AFCON opener with late goal from Foster

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Lyle Foster’s match-winning 79th-minute strike allowed South Africa to win first opening match at AFCON since 2004.

Lyle Foster scored a superb winner from outside the box as South Africa defeated Angola 2-1 in Africa Cup of Nations Group B in Marrakesh on Monday, the first time they have won their opening match ⁠at the continental finals in 21 years.

South Africa also had a goal disallowed and struck the crossbar, ​just about deserving the nervy victory. Angola also had chances and will ‍be disappointed not to have gotten something from the game.

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South Africa took the lead on 21 minutes when Oswin Appollis showed neat footwork in the box to work a shooting chance and put the ball in the bottom ‍corner. But Angola ⁠equalised before the break as Show got a touch to Fredy’s free kick to steer the ball into the net.

The winning moment came after 79 minutes, when Foster was teed up 20 yards out and curled his shot into the top corner to give the bronze medallists from two years ago a positive start to their campaign.

It was a workmanlike performance from South Africa, who do not have the plethora of players in top ​European leagues that their tournament rivals enjoy, with Foster their only one ‌at Premier League Burnley.

But they are a well-oiled machine under Belgian coach Hugo Broos and did enough for a victory that set them well on course for the knockout rounds. Egypt and Zimbabwe will meet later on Monday in ‌the same pool.

South Africa’s Oswin Appollis, centre, scores the opening goal of the match in the 21st minute [Themba Hadebe/AP]

Even first half

South Africa took the lead after a period of sustained possession that led to Khuliso Mudau’s cross, which was ‌touched by both Sipho Mbule and Foster before Appollis beat two ⁠defenders and side-footed into the bottom corner of the net.

Angola equalised on 35 minutes when Fredy’s low free kick was touched into the bottom corner by Show, his second goal in his 50th cap for his country, to make it ‌1-1 at the break.

South Africa thought they had retaken the lead when halftime substitute Tshepang Moremi turned his defender and fired low into the bottom corner of the net, but a VAR review showed ‍that Foster was offside in the buildup.

South Africa’s Mbekezeli Mbokazi crashed the ball against the crossbar with a rasping shot from 35 yards, before Foster’s clinical strike secured all three points.

Zambia rally to draw with Mali

In an earlier Group A match on Monday, Zambia’s Patson Daka scored with a spectacular diving header in stoppage time to see his ‍side come from behind ‍and force a 1-1 draw with Mali in Casablanca.

Mali looked in control for most of the encounter, but paid the price for sitting back in the closing stages as Zambia staged a ⁠late recovery, with Daka leaping through the air to force home Mathews Banda’s curling cross two minutes into ​stoppage time at the end of the game.

Lassine Sinayoko had ‌taken advantage of sloppy defending to give ‌Mali a 62nd-minute lead ⁠after his strike partner, El Bilal Toure, had a first-half penalty saved.

Patson Daka reacts.
Zambia’s forward Patson Daka celebrates scoring his team’s equalising goal in the 90th minute against Mali at Mohammed V Stadium in Casablanca, Morocco on December 22, 2025 [Abdel Majid Bziouat/AFP]

US agriculture agency sheds 20,000 employees in the first five months of Trump administration

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US farm agency lost 20,000 staff in first five months of Trump administration

Baby Siwar readmitted to Gaza hospital after receiving treatment in Jordan

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Fergal KeaneSpecial correspondent

BBC Siwar AshourBBC

Siwar Ashour spent six months in Jordan after being evacuated from Gaza

A one-year-old Palestinian girl evacuated from Gaza with severe nutritional problems is back in hospital in the territory after being returned there from Jordan. Siwar Ashour, whose story the BBC has followed for several months, was repatriated to Gaza on 3 December after completing her medical treatment in Amman.

She’d spent six months in hospital there under a medical evacuation programme run by the Kingdom of Jordan. Her grandmother, Sahar Ashour, said she became ill three days after coming back.

“She started having diarrhoea and vomiting and her situation keeps getting worse. The diarrhoea won’t go away,” she told a freelance journalist working for the BBC in Gaza. International journalists have been banned by Israel from entering Gaza independently since the start of the war nearly two years ago.

Siwar is being treated at al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the central Gaza Strip where Dr Khalil al-Daqran told the BBC she is “receiving the necessary treatment, but the situation is still bad for her”. The doctor said Siwar was suffering from a gastro-intestinal infection. She has an immune system deficiency which makes it hard for her to fight bacteria. She also struggles to absorb nutrition, meaning she requires specialised baby formula.

Dr Khalil al-Daqran

Dr Khalil al-Daqran said poor hygiene conditions had disease to spread

Dr Daqran said that hospitals in Gaza – many of which were badly damaged by Israeli bombing and fighting nearby with Hamas before a ceasefire took effect in October – were seeing an increase in child admissions. Poor hygiene conditions caused by the destruction of vital infrastructure have led to the spread of infections and disease.

“Since the ceasefire was announced, the number of child patients arriving at Gaza Strip hospitals is three times the capacity… The situation at al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital is no different from other hospitals in the Gaza Strip.

“It suffers from a severe shortage of medicines and medical supplies, and a major shortage regarding electric generators, which are the main artery to keep a hospital going.”

The World Health Organization (WHO) described humanitarian needs in Gaza as “staggering, with current assistance addressing only the most basic survival requirements”.

Siwar was evacuated to Jordan in June after the BBC reported on her case and raised it directly with the Jordanian authorities.

Jordan’s Minister of Communications, Dr Mohammed al-Momani, told us that Siwar was among 45 children returned to Gaza after completing their treatment. Under the evacuation scheme all patients are sent back after medical attention.

I put it to Dr al-Momani that people might find it hard to accept that a child in such a vulnerable condition could be sent back to Gaza in the current conditions.

“No patient is sent back before they finish their medical treatment… the first reason [why they are returned] is that this will allow us to bring more patients from Gaza. We cannot take all of them at once. We have to take them in batches. So far we have taken 18 batches.

“The second reason is that we don’t want to contribute in any shape or form to the displacement of Palestinians from their land and all patients are told… after treatment you are sent back so other patients and other children can be brought in for treatment.”

Dr Mohammed al-Momani

Dr Mohammed al-Momani says patients are sent back from Jordan after medical treatment to allow authorities to bring in new patients from Gaza

Jordan also treats war wounded at its field hospital in Gaza and has supplied aid via air drops and road convoys. The kingdom hosts more than 2 million Palestinian refugees, who fled conflicts with Israel since 1948, and 500,000 refugees from other countries, mostly Syrians.

Since last March some 300 sick and wounded children and 730 parents and guardians have been brought to Jordan out of 2000 scheduled for treatment. Other countries in the region like the United Arab Emirates and Turkey have treated thousands of sick civilians from Gaza.

The specialised formula milk Siwar needs was either not available or in very short supply during the ongoing conflict. In March, Israel imposed a total blockade on aid into Gaza that was lifted partially after 11 weeks. Since the ceasefire there has been a surge in aid deliveries, although the UN and aid agencies say not enough humanitarian supplies are flowing.

Siwar Ashour pictured in her bed

Siwar’s family are trying to get her evacuated once more due to her condition

The Jordanian authorities gave Siwar’s family a supply of 12 cans of the hypoallergenic Neocate formula on their departure for Gaza. However her mother Najwa told us that Israeli officials confiscated much of what they’d been given – nine of their 12 cans were taken.

“They told us, ‘It is forbidden to take more than these cans,'” said Siwar’s mother, Najwa Ashour. “Even though it is therapeutic milk and they said that treatment is allowed, yet they took them.”

She also said that extra clothing the family had been given in Jordan was taken. “They searched us from top to bottom. When they saw us wearing clothes over each other [layered] they refused to let us out, and told us, ‘You must take off all the clothes, down to one outfit.'”

I asked the Israeli government why the milk formula and clothing were confiscated? They replied that limits were placed on what could be taken back for “security considerations.”

They said only minimal luggage was allowed and this had been conveyed to the Jordanian authorities and the returning families. “In cases where the luggage exceeded the approved scope, its entry was denied.”

The WHO has appealed for more countries to offer medical evacuation to patients who cannot get the necessary treatment in Gaza.

It has also called on the Israeli government to allow patients to be treated in occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank “which is the most time and cost effective route.” Israel stopped allowing such evacuations after the Hamas-led 7 October attacks on Israel in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 abducted into Gaza.

Cogat, the Israeli military bosy in charge of aid, said the process for Gazan residents’ departure to third countries had been substantially eased.

Siwar’s family has been given Neocate milk formula since returning to Gaza. There have also been donations of money, including funds raised from online appeals. Jordanian representatives in Gaza have also visited the family to provide assistance.

The Ashours are trying to have Siwar evacuated once more – a process that has begun with the issuing of a permit by Palestinian health officials. It will be managed by the WHO which deals with all evacuation requests from a place the UN calls “a wasteland”.

With additional reporting by Malak Hassouneh, Suha Kawar and Alice Doyard.

Billionaire Castel’s daughter demands removal of CEO in acrimonious split

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An increasingly acrimonious dispute over the direction of French billionaire Pierre Castel’s drinks conglomerate burst into full public view after a pair of heirs demanded the group CEO’s resignation and organized a vote aimed at ousting him.

Romy Castel, daughter of the 99-year-old founder, and Alain Castel, his nephew, told Bloomberg News they deeply disagree with the way Chief Executive Officer Gregory Clerc is running the wine and beer conglomerate and the power they say he’s amassed. 

Clerc “is attempting to take control,” Romy Castel, 51, said in a telephone interview, referring to a move by the CEO earlier this month to remove Alain Castel from two company boards.

In a separate statement, Alain Castel, 65, questioned Clerc’s strategic vision and ability to effectively run the group, which has a workforce of 43,000.

“For me and my family, it has become vital that Mr. Clerc fully appreciate the situation and realize that his resignation is the best solution,” he said. 

The closely held Castel Group, which had sales of about €6.5 billion ($7.6 billion) last year from its globe-spanning wine, beer and agricultural operations, has been torn in recent months by internal strife that has pitted key members of the family against Clerc. As the first outsider to oversee operations within the secretive empire, the dispute highlights the risks of generational change within family-controlled companies. 

In a statement, the eponymous Castel Group said that Clerc rejects the family members’ claims and added that he remains focused on his mandate to develop and grow the company “within a framework of demanding and responsible governance.” 

The website of another company in the group, Castel Afrique, posted a message saying that the board of Castel Group had met in Luxembourg on Dec. 11 and backed Clerc. 

The acrimony is escalating at a time when the founder’s health has been faltering. Pierre Castel remained the public face of the businesses until a few years ago, and Clerc was named CEO in 2023 after serving as the founder’s tax lawyer in Switzerland. 

The extent of the Castel fortune and the group’s labyrinthine corporate structure came to light through a tax dispute that the billionaire lost on appeal. A Swiss federal court ruled in a July 2023 decision that the businessman had evaded taxes as a longstanding resident in the country. Castel was fined more than €350 million.

Tax Probe

While the Swiss legal procedure is over, a tax probe by French authorities is ongoing, according to Romy Castel. 

The power struggle within the conglomerate surfaced earlier this month when Alain Castel, who heads the wine arm of the group, Castel-Vins, said he was removed from the board of a Luxembourg-based holding company, D.F. Holding, as well as Cassiopee Pte. Ltd., a Singapore-based entity that is higher up in the corporate structure. Clerc has seats on both boards. 

D.F. Holding is wholly owned by Cassiopee, which is ultimately controlled by Investment Beverage Business Fund, also in the city state. 

In his statement, Alain Castel said “deep disagreement” with Clerc has been simmering since his arrival as CEO, adding that one trigger was a survey carried out that he claims hurt a number of projects. 

Romy Castel said she has convened an extraordinary general meeting in Singapore on Jan. 8 of Investment Beverage Business Management, or IBBM, the fund management vehicle, to seek Clerc’s removal as director. 

A recent filing for that company lists Romy Castel, a French national based in Switzerland, as a shareholder, alongside another of her father’s nephews, Michel Palu. The other shareholders on the list are from outside the family: Two former longstanding French executives, Guy de Clercq and Gilles Martignac, as well as CEO Pierre Baer.  

Alain Castel described Romy as a “majority shareholder” of IBBM. The filing shows her having a 24% stake.

With the two former executives as allies “I have the majority,” to remove Clerc, Romy Castel said in the interview. “I am very, very confident.”

Pierre Castel’s empire spans the wine business that started in France and includes chateaus, vineyards, the Nicolas brand of stores and online seller Vinatis. The much bigger brewing and soda operation is focused on Africa, with some 61 brands of beer. 

D.F. Holding, which includes both beer and wine operations, reported sales of €6.5 billion in 2024, little changed from the year before. Dividends paid to shareholders rose about eight-fold to €350 million compared with €43 million. 

Since Clerc came on board, the firm has consolidated results across a swath of Castel operations. These include factories in 22 African countries as well as sugar plantations, flour and distillery activities.

This year it warned about lower wine consumption in France, political tension in a number of African countries and the war in Ukraine.

Supplies dwindling at displacement camp for refugees fleeing Sudan war

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NewsFeed

Authorities say they don’t have enough food, tents, and equipment to accommodate everyone fleeing Sudan’s war. Al Jazeera’s Mohamed Vall visited the Ghoz-el-Salam camp in northern Sudan.

Bandcamp Friday payouts reach $154 million since 2020, with $19 million paid out in 2025 alone

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Direct-to-fan platform Bandcamp has revealed that artists and labels have been paid out $154 million via its Bandcamp Friday initiative since the program’s launch in March 2020.

The company launched Bandcamp Fridays at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic when lockdowns impacted the earnings of indie artists from tours and shows. The latest figure represents a $31 million increase from the $123 million Bandcamp reported in May 2024.

This year alone, Bandcamp Fridays saw payouts of $19 million from fans directly to artists and labels, topping the prior year’s total.

Bandcamp typically takes 15% of digital sales and 10% of physical goods. On Bandcamp Fridays, it Bandcamp waives its revenue share to let musicians and labels keep the full purchase price when fans buy music or merch. The company said December’s event generated more than $3.8 million in 24 hours, the highest single-day total of the year.

Bandcamp added that artists receive an average of 82% of sales on regular days through the platform’s artist-first business model, contributing to over $1.5 billion that Bandcamp has paid out to artists and labels to date, the platform said on Thursday (December 18).

As of writing, Bandcamp’s website says the platform has seen fans pay artists $1.64 billion, with 77,031 records sold via Bandcamp yesterday alone.

Dan Melnick, General Manager at Bandcamp, said: “Five years on, Bandcamp Fridays continue to show just how powerful direct fan support can be.”

“2025 was another brilliant year for artists and labels, capped by our strongest Friday of the year, and we’re incredibly excited to bring even more opportunities to the community in 2026, expanding to 8 next year.”

“2025 was another brilliant year for artists and labels, capped by our strongest Friday of the year, and we’re incredibly excited to bring even more opportunities to the community in 2026, expanding to 8 next year.”

Dan Melnick, Bandcamp

The platform plans to run eight Bandcamp Fridays in 2026: February 6, March 6, May 1, August 7, September 4, October 2, November 6 and December 4.

In September, Bandcamp launched a new subscription service that gives users access to monthly record selections, listening parties, recommendations and exclusive artist content. The ‘Bandcamp Clubs’ feature launched with a USD $13-a-month subscription fee and offers a “subscribe-to-own” music discovery experience.

Melnick said at the time: “Instead of algorithms, fans get human-curated picks from some of the best DJs and journalists in their respective areas, exclusive interviews with artists, and community listening parties.”

Founded in 2008, Bandcamp launched as a direct-to-consumer alternative to record labels for artists. It has since expanded its services to include features such as ticketed live-streaming and vinyl pressing.

Artists like Peter Gabriel and Bjork have placed their catalogs on the platform.

In 2022, Fortnite developer Epic Games acquired Bandcamp and sold it to music licensing platform Songtradr in 2023.

Music Business Worldwide

New appointee from Trump administration pledges to work towards integrating Greenland into United States

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Donald Trump has sparked a renewed disagreement with Denmark after appointing a special envoy to Greenland, the Arctic island he has said he would like to annex.

Trump announced on Sunday that Jeff Landry, the Republican governor of Louisiana, would become the US’s special envoy to Greenland, a semi-autonomous part of the Kingdom of Denmark.

Gov Landry said in a post on X it was an honour to serve in a “volunteer position to make Greenland a part of the US”.

Greenland’s prime minister said the island must “decide our own future” and its “territorial integrity must be respected”.

The move angered Copenhagen, which will call the US ambassador for “an explanation”.

Denmark’s Foreign Minister, Lars Lokke Rasmussen, described the appointment as “deeply upsetting” and warned Washington to respect Danish sovereignty.

He told Danish broadcaster TV2: “As long as we have a kingdom consisting of Denmark, the Faroe Islands and Greenland, we cannot accept actions that undermine our territorial integrity.”

Greenland’s Prime Minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, said the territory was willing to cooperate with the US and other countries, but only on the basis of mutual respect.

He said: “The appointment of a special envoy does not change anything for us. We decide our own future. Greenland belongs to Greenlanders, and territorial integrity must be respected.”

Writing on social media, the US president said Landry understood how “essential Greenland is to our national security” and would advance US interests.

Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has revived his long-standing interest with Greenland, citing its strategic location and mineral wealth.

He has refused to rule out using force to secure control of the island, a stance that has shocked Denmark, a Nato ally that has traditionally enjoyed close relations with Washington.

Greenland, home to about 57,000 people, has had extensive self-government since 1979, though defence and foreign policy remain in Danish hands. While most Greenlanders favour eventual independence from Denmark, opinion polls show overwhelming opposition to becoming part of the US.

The US has a number of special envoys. Some are to countries and regions. Others address specific issues.

But the significance of this appointment is both the US presumption that Greenland is separate to Denmark and the new appointee’s assertion that he will help the island become part of the US.

Envoys are informal appointments and unlike official diplomats, do not have to be approved by the host country.

What this appointment shows is that Trump’s ambition to control Greenland remains undimmed.

As with his military and rhetorical aggression towards Venezuela, the president is determined to gain greater control over what his recent National Security Strategy called “the western hemisphere”, a sphere of influence that he hopes will cover the whole of the Americas.

Trump’s new envoy pick Landry has previously voiced his opinion on Greenland, writing on his personal X account in January: “President Donald J. Trump is absolutely right! We need to ensure that Greenland joins the United States. GREAT for them, GREAT for us! Let’s get it done!”

Landry said his new role would not affect his duties as Louisiana governor. He is a military veteran and former police officer who was a US Congressman and Louisiana’s attorney general before being elected governor in 2023.

He has welcomed the president’s proposal to send National Guard troops to New Orleans as part of his push against crime in American cities.

The dispute over Landry’s appointment comes as strategic competition in the Arctic grows, with melting ice opening new shipping routes and increasing access to valuable mineral resources.

Greenland’s location between North America and Europe also makes it central to US and Nato security planning and puts it on the shortest route for missiles between Russia and the US.

The US has maintained a base in Greenland since World War Two, after invading to establish military and radio stations across the territory after the Nazis occupied Denmark during the conflict.

Vice-President JD Vance visited the base in March as he asked Greenland’s people to “cut a deal with the US”.

The US reopened a consulate in Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, in 2020 – during Trump’s first term – after closing it in 1953. A number of European countries, as well as Canada, have honorary general consulates in Greenland.

Naoya Inoue responds to Terence Crawford’s unexpected retirement from boxing

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Terence Crawford exited the current pound-for-pound debate last week when he announced his retirement from the sport of boxing, leaving many to slot Naoya Inoue at number one.

The switch-hitter from Omaha, Nebraska made a sudden announcement that he was hanging up the gloves while rumours were swirling that he may rematch Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez next year.

Crawford beat Canelo via unanimous decision to become a three-weight undisputed world champion. Having won belts in a total of five divisions and compiling an undefeated record of 42-0, he will be inducted into the Hall of Fame with open arms.

Some in the sport would have liked to see ‘Bud’ continue, but Japanese superstar Inoue — who has been undisputed in two divisions — told Fight Hub TV that he was not surprised.

“It’s a stage that will come to any fighter, so I’m not thinking anything about it.”

Crawford has been praised by the likes of Andre Ward and Roy Jones Jr for bowing out on top.

Asked if the retirement puts him in the number one pound-for-pound slot, Inoue nodded, though he has considered himself the best for a long time, above both Crawford and Oleksandr Usyk, the man who rounds out the widely accepted top three.

The 32-year-old looks to prove that one again when he faces David Picasso in this year’s final major fight card. The Riyadh Season main event is propped up by a bout between Junto Nakatani and Sebastian Hernandez, with tentative plans in place for Inoue and Nakatani to face off in May of next year at the Tokyo Dome.