A new class action lawsuit has been filed against Ticketmaster alleging its website deploys unauthorized surveillance tools that violate California privacy laws.
The latest complaint filed in the US District Court for the Central District of California on Monday (January 5), only listed Ticketmaster as the defendant. The class action was led by Solano County, Calif. resident named JeffreyScruggs.
The complaint, which you can read here, claims that Ticketmaster employs advertising and analytics trackers from Google, Facebook, TikTok and MicrosoftBing, as well as those operated by Pinterest, Snap and Comscore, to illegally “collect, receive, and process” information from users such as IP addresses, page URLs, timestamps, and device or browser characteristics, among others.
The lawsuit alleges that the information transmitted through these technologies “is used for behavioral profiling, advertising measurement and attribution, personalization, audience segmentation, and identity-linked tracking.”
“[Ticketmaster] deploys these technologies without judicial authorization and without obtaining Plaintiff’s or Class Members’ consent, in violation of the California Invasion of Privacy Act,” according to the complaint.
“[Ticketmaster] deploys these technologies without judicial authorization and without obtaining Plaintiff’s or Class Members’ consent, in violation of the California Invasion of Privacy Act.”
Jeffrey Scruggs-led Class action lawsuit
The complaint cited stipulations under California Penal Code, which prohibit unauthorized use of “pen registers” and “trap and trace devices” that “collect routing and addressing metadata for commercial purposes” without the user’s consent.
The lawsuit claims Ticketmaster generates revenue through “surreptitious collection” of users’ personal information.
The proposed class action seeks to represent all California residents who accessed Ticketmaster’s website. California law allows for $5,000 in penalties per violation. The lawsuit said the total matter in controversy exceeds $5 million and there are over 100 members of the proposed class.
The latest lawsuit marks the latest Ticketmaster and LiveNation. Last week (December 30, 2025), defunct ticketing company Fanimal, based in Santa Monica, California, sued the two companies over their alleged anticompetitive tactics that drove it out of business.
Most recently on Tuesday (January 6), Ticketmaster and Live Nation have asked a federal judge to throw out the US Federal Trade Commission’s lawsuit over ticket resales. The FTC sued the pair in September, arguing that they violated the BOTS Act by knowingly allowing ticket scalpers to buy up large blocks of tickets during on-sales.
Separately, the US Department of Justice sued the companies in 2024, seeking to break them apart after merging in 2010. A federal judge denied Live Nation’s motion to dismiss two major parts of that lawsuit in March 2025. The company then filed a motion asking for a quick end to that case in November.
Last month, a class action by consumers received certification, and another group of plaintiffs that includes Taylor Swift fans survived a dismissal motion in November related to the Eras Tour presale.
Who: Barcelona vs Real Madrid What: Spanish Super Cup final Where: King Abdullah Sports City Stadium in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia When: Sunday, January 11, at 8pm (19:00 GMT) How to follow: We will have all the buildup on Al Jazeera Sport from 15:00 GMT, in advance of our text commentary stream.
One of sport’s greatest matchups will grace the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium in Jeddah on Sunday as Barcelona face fierce rivals Real Madrid in the final of the Spanish Super Cup.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 itemsend of list
Barca, the defending champions who beat Real in last year’s final, are the team to stop once more in Spain’s top flight, La Liga.
Real, on the other hand, are under increasing pressure, especially their new manager, Xabi Alonso.
Al Jazeera Sport takes a look at a final that carries so much more weight when it holds the tag: El Clasico.
Why are Real Madrid and Xabi Alonso under pressure?
Alonso has steadied Real Madrid’s ship in recent weeks after a tumultuous period, but the Spanish Super Cup final seems a make-or-break moment for the beleaguered coach.
On the brink of the sack after a dire run of form, Alonso responded by leading Madrid to five consecutive victories, the fifth coming on Thursday against Atletico Madrid in the semifinals.
Beating Super Cup holders Barcelona would bring Alonso the first trophy at the helm.
A second victory in two matches against Barcelona would buy Alonso time and breathing room.
But succumbing to Hansi Flick’s side would give Real president Florentino Perez a further excuse to remove a coach he hired in June but has never appeared convinced by.
Spanish media reported that Perez was set to sack Alonso if the team lost against Manchester City in the Champions League on December 10, which they did, but the team’s improved performance bought the coach another chance.
Real Madrid’s Kylian Mbappe during training in Saudi Arabia ahead of the Super Cup final [Vincent West/Reuters]
What happened in last year’s Super Cup final between Real and Barca?
Barcelona trounced Real Madrid 5-2 in last year’s final, which was also in Jeddah.
It was a damaging blow for then-manager Carlo Ancelotti, while proving a springboard for Hansi Flick – fresh in his role as Barca boss.
How important is Spanish Super Cup to Real Madrid and Barcelona?
Lifting the Super Cup worked for Flick’s fledgling tenure at Barcelona last season, galvanising his team to claim La Liga and the Copa del Rey.
In the three seasons prior to that, the Super Cup winners also went on to win the Spanish top flight.
“Two things are clear – as it’s the tournament we’re playing for 1768082949, it’s the most important,” said Alonso.
“If you ask me about it in terms of order of priority in the season, it’s the fourth.”
What’s the latest on Real Madrid forward Kylian Mbappe?
Real are boosted by the return of Mbappe to the squad after he missed the 2-1 win over Atletico and Sunday’s 5-1 thrashing of Real Betis in La Liga while recovering from a knee sprain.
The coach said Mbappe has as much chance of starting against Barcelona as anyone else and is confident the forward has recovered, even though he was expected to miss another week.
With 29 goals in 24 appearances across all competitions, Mbappe is Real Madrid’s top goal scorer this season and their clear, stand-out performer.
The striker has netted six goals against Barcelona in five games since joining Real Madrid.
His return could make life trickier for Alonso because the team does not seem to function at its best when Mbappe, Vinicius Junior and Jude Bellingham line up together.
Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal during training ahead of the Spanish Super Cup final [Vincent West/Reuters]
How are Real Madrid’s Brazil forwards, Vinicius and Rodrygo, faring?
One player who has become essential for Alonso in recent weeks is Brazilian winger Rodrygo.
After a miserable run of 32 games without scoring, the right-winger has burst into life with three goals and three assists in his last five matches.
On the opposite flank, Vinicius is struggling for form.
Since finishing second in the 2024 Ballon d’Or rankings, he has dipped far from his top level.
Vinicius has not scored in his last 16 outings for Real Madrid, and Alonso must decide whether to line up with him against Barca.
What happened the last time Barcelona played Real Madrid?
The Catalans beat Madrid four times in four encounters last season, but Alonso’s side beat their rivals 2-1 in October in La Liga.
“We have to win; we lost two finals against them last year,” urged Madrid goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois.
“They have to win, too. After losing the Clasico in La Liga, they’ll want revenge.”
Barcelona ready for Mbappe return for Real Madrid
Barcelona coach Hansi Flick said Mbappe is the man of the moment, but backed his team to succeed despite his arrival in Saudi Arabia.
“At the moment, Mbappe is the best striker… he’s scored many, many goals, and he’s a world-class player, that’s what I can say,” admitted Flick, whose side hammered Real Betis 5-0 in their semifinal on Wednesday.
However, the German coach was eager to point out that last season, his side beat Mbappe’s Madrid on all four occasions they met.
Barca thrashed them 5-2 in last season’s Spanish Super Cup final, as well as winning both La Liga Clasicos and the Copa del Rey final.
In their one meeting with Alonso’s side this season, Madrid secured a 2-1 league win.
“How many Clasicos have we played in the last year and a half? And how many did we win? We lost one,” said Flick.
“I know he’s a fantastic player, and for him, with space behind the [defence], he’s really great…
“We will adapt something, like we always do, but it’s not especially about Mbappe, it’s about Real Madrid, it’s about how we want to play and how we expect they want to.”
Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal celebrates with the trophy and his teammates after winning the Spanish Super Cup last season [Pedro Nunes/Reuters]
What’s the Spanish Super Cup?
The Super Cup pits together the winners and runners-up of both the Spanish domestic league, La Liga, and Spain’s domestic cup competition, Copa del Rey.
Although first played in 1982, between the league and cup winners alone, it was expanded to four teams in 2020.
Barcelona are the current league champions, with Real Madrid finishing second. They were also the finalists of the Copa del Rey, resulting in Athletic Madrid and Athletic Bilbao lining up in the semifinals, following their third and fourth-place finishes in the league last season.
Where will the Spanish Super Cup final be played?
The Super Cup is being staged in Saudi Arabia for the second year running, with all three matches staged at King Abdullah Sports City Stadium in Jeddah.
The venue plays host to the Saudi Arabian national team, and will be part of the 2034 World Cup.
Riyadh played host to the final the year before, with Real Madrid emerging victorious with a 4-1 defeat of Barcelona.
Head-to-head
This will be the 262nd meeting between the teams, with Real Madrid winning 106, and Barcelona winning 104, of the encounters.
Barcelona team news
Marc-Andre ter Stegen, Gavi and Andreas Christensen are all absent, with the latter two troubled by knee problems and the former out with an unspecified complaint.
Yamal is expected to return to the starting eleven, having not been fit enough to start the semifinal against Atletico. The winger did, however, come off the bench to find the net.
Ronald Araujo has returned to full training, but is only expected to be named among the subs.
Real Madrid team news
Whether Mbappe makes the team sheet, even as a starter or as a sub, is the headline news, following a week of speculation about the forward’s knee injury.
Trent Alexander-Arnold, Eder Militao and Brahim Diaz remain absent, but there is a chance that Rodrygo, Antonio Rudiger and Raul Asencio could pass fitness tests after knocks sustained in the semifinal against Atletico.
Dean Huijsen returned to the bench for the Atletico match and could return to the starting eleven in place of Rudiger, should his fellow defender fail to make the grade.
Barcelona’s predicted starting lineup
J Garcia, Kounde, Cubarsi, E Garcia, Balde, Pedri, De Jong, Yamal, Raphinha, Fermin, F Torres
A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.
Watch: Government building on fire as protests continue in Karaj, Iran
Staff at three hospitals in Iran have told the BBC their facilities are overwhelmed with dead or injured patients, as major anti-government protests continue.
A medic at one Tehran hospital said there were “direct shots to the heads of the young people, to their hearts as well”, while a doctor said an eye hospital in the capital had gone into crisis mode.
Two of the medical workers who spoke to the BBC said they treated gunshot wounds from both live ammunition and pellets.
On Friday, the US repeated that killing protesters would be met with a military response. Iran blamed the US for turning peaceful protests into what it called “violent subversive acts and widespread vandalism”.
Reacting to the latest developments, President Trump posted on social media: “Iran is looking at FREEDOM, perhaps like never before. The USA stands ready to help!!!”
Warning: This article contains graphic descriptions of death and injury
The protests began in the capital Tehran a fortnight ago over economic hardship.
They have since spread to more than 100 cities and towns across all of Iran’s provinces. Dozens of protesters have been killed and hundreds detained, human rights monitors say, with 21 security personnel reportedly also killed.
The BBC and most other international news organisations are barred from reporting inside Iran, and the country has been under a near-total internet blackout since Thursday evening, making obtaining and verifying information difficult.
A hospital worker in Tehran described “very horrible scenes”, saying there were so many wounded that staff did not have time to perform CPR.
“Around 38 people died. Many as soon as they reached the emergency beds… direct shots to the heads of the young people, to their hearts as well. Many of them didn’t even make it to the hospital.
“The number was so large that there wasn’t enough space in the morgue; the bodies were placed on top of one another.
“After the morgue became full, they stacked them on top of one another in the prayer room,” she said.
The hospital worker said the dead and wounded were young people.
“Couldn’t look at many of them, they were 20-25 years old.”
BBC Persian have verified that 70 bodies were also brought to Poursina Hospital in Rasht city on Friday night. The morgue there was at full capacity, so the bodies were taken away. The authorities asked the relatives of the dead for 7 billion rials (£5,222; $7,000) to release them for burial, a hospital source said.
Watch: Protesters take to the streets of Tehran on Friday night
A doctor who contacted the BBC via a Starlink satellite connection on Friday night, said Tehran’s main eye specialist centre, Farabi Hospital, had gone into crisis mode with emergency services overwhelmed.
Non-urgent admissions and surgeries were suspended and staff called in to deal with emergency cases, he said.
Iran’s security forces often use shotguns which fire cartridges filled with pellets during confrontations with protesters.
‘I saw one person who had been shot in the eye’
Another doctor from the city of Kashan in central Iran told the BBC many injured protesters had been hit in the eyes, and that his colleagues in hospitals across the city reported receiving many wounded people during Friday night’s unrest.
Thursday night produced similar accounts.
A doctor at a medical centre in Tehran told the BBC: “The number of injured people and fatalities was very high. I saw one person who had been shot in the eye, with the bullet exiting from the back of his head.
“Around midnight, the centre’s doors were closed. A group of people broke the door and threw a man who had been shot inside, then left. But it was too late – he had died before reaching hospital and could not be saved.”
The BBC also obtained a video and audio message from a medic at a hospital in the south-west city of Shiraz on Thursday, who said large numbers of injured were being brought in, and the hospital did not have enough surgeons to cope with the influx.
Watch: Why are there huge protests going on in Iran?
What footage is emerging from Iran shows protesters in Tehran taking to the streets en masse on Friday night, burning vehicles, and a government building set alight in Karaj, near the capital.
The Iranian army has since said it will join security forces in defending public property.
It follows reports that Iranian security forces were spread thin as the unrest extended throughout the country.
Iranian authorities issued a series of co-ordinated warnings to protesters on Friday, with the National Security Council saying “decisive” legal action would be taken against “armed vandals”.
Since the demonstrations began on 28 December, at least 51 protesters, including seven children, and 21 security personnel have been killed, according to the US-based Human Rights Activist News Agency. More than 2,311 individuals have also been arrested, it says.
The Norway-based Iran Human Rights reports at least 51 protesters, including nine children, have been killed.
BBC Persian has verified the identities of 26 killed protesters, including six children.
Iranian police maintained that no one was killed in Tehran on Friday night, though they said 26 buildings were set on fire, causing extensive damage.
An eyewitness who joined the protests on Thursday and Friday nights in Tehran told BBC Persian Television that Gen Z Iranians have been instrumental in encouraging their parents and older people to come out and join the protest marches, urging them not to be afraid.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said on Saturday that Europe backed Iranians’ mass protests and condemned the “violent repression” against demonstrators.
UN spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said on Friday the international body was very disturbed by the loss of life.
“People anywhere in the world have a right to demonstrate peacefully, and governments have a responsibility to protect that right and to ensure that that right is respected,” he said.
French President Emmanuel Macron, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz released a joint statement on Friday calling on Iranian authorities to “allow for the freedom of expression and peaceful assembly without fear of reprisal”.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei remained defiant in a televised address on Friday, saying: “The Islamic Republic came to power through the blood of several hundred thousand honourable people and it will not back down in the face of those who deny this.”
In later remarks broadcast on state television, Khamenei reiterated that his regime “will not shirk from dealing with destructive elements” who he said were “trying to please the president of the US”.
Meanwhile, the son of Iran’s last shah, who was deposed by an Islamic revolution in 1979, described the protests as “magnificent” and urged Iranians to continue over the weekend.
“Our goal is no longer just to take to the streets. The goal is to prepare to seize and hold city centres,” Reza Pahlavi said in a social media video.
US-based Pahlavi also said he was preparing to return to the country.
But former UK ambassador to Iran Sir Simon Gass told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that “we really shouldn’t get too ahead of ourselves” when discussing regime change.
He said the lack of organised opposition within Iran meant people did not have an alternative figure to coalesce around as things stood.
However, he noted the protests were “a much wider movement” than previous flare-ups, which were triggered by Iranians finding it “almost impossible to make ends meet because of the disaster to the economy”.
On Friday, President Trump reiterated his threat to Iran’s leadership that the US would “hit them very hard” if they “start killing people”.
He clarified that this did not mean “boots on the ground”. Last year, the US conducted air strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities.
Meanwhile, the US state department said accusations by Iran’s foreign minister that Washington and Israel were fuelling the protests were a “delusional attempt to deflect” attention from the challenges the regime was facing.
Taghi Rahmani, an Iranian political activist who spent 14 years in prison and whose wife, Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi, was re-arrested in December, said any lasting change must come from Iranians instead of foreign intervention.
The protests have been the most widespread since a 2022 uprising sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, who was detained by morality police for allegedly not wearing her hijab properly. More than 550 people were killed and 20,000 detained, according to human rights groups.
Additional reporting by Soroush Negahdari, Mallory Moench and Aleks Phillips
Brought to you by Spectrum Aquatics, a SwimSwam partner, our Weekly Wonders of Age Group Swimming series celebrates swimmers of every age and experience level with age group profiles of some recent results.
Sara Young, 13, Rockville Montgomery Swim Club (PV): Competing before her 13th birthday in mid-December, Young set five lifetime bests at the Riley Eaton Holiday Inviational in Boyds, Md., cracking the top 25 in the girls’ 11-12 age group in three of them. Young clocked 1:51.41 in the 200 free, lowering her month-old best time of 1:52.01 to climb to 11th all-time in the 11-12 age group. She also went 56.06 in the 100 fly to rank 18th all-time, while in the 100 free, her PB of 51.78 slots her 22nd all-time. She also ranks 1st this season in the girls’ 11-12 age group in all three events. The Rockville Montgomery Swim Club product also cracked the top 100 all-time in the 50 free, clocking 24.18 to rank 99th, and she added a fifth best time in the 200 IM (2:09.55).
Kate Allen, 13, Carmel Swim Club (IN): Representing the Indiana Zone Team at the Mid States All-Star Championships last weekend in Indianapolis, Allen was on fire, collecting three individual victories and a pair of runner-up finishes while contributing to two winning relays. Allen clocked 2:00.24 in the 200 IM to rank 1st this season among 13-year-old girls, while she moves to 2nd in both the 200 free (1:49.47) and 500 free (4:53.37) and 3rd in the 50 free (23.56). In the 13-14 age group, she ranks 4th this season in the 200 IM, 7th in the 200 free, 9th in the 500 free and 16th in the 50 free. She added notable splits of 23.09 on the anchor leg on the 200 free relay and 25.74 swimming fly on the 200 medley relay, both of which were victorious.
Gerhardt Hoover, 17, Commonwealth Swimming (NE): Hoover exploded for six best times at the New England Swimming Senior Championships in Andover the weekend before Christmas, with his most notable swims coming in the 200 back and 200 IM. In the 200 back, he dropped more than a second off his week-old best time of 1:45.06, set at Winter Juniors – East, to clock 1:43.84 and climb to 6th this season among 17-year-old boys and 24th in the 17-18 age group. In the 200 IM, the Virginia commit lowered his 10-day-old best time of 1:46.54 in 1:46.19, ranking him 9th this season among 17-year-old boys and 22nd in the 17-18 age group. He also set best times in the 200 free (1:39.72), 50 back (22.84) and 100 back (48.55).
Sarah Chiang, 11, Pacific Dragons Swim Team (PN): Competing at the Pacific Northwest 14 & Under Short Course Championships in early December, Chiang set best times in six events, showing impressive range across freestyle, backstroke and IM. In the 1650 free, Chiang dropped more than 36 seconds from her best time to clock 18:38.64, ranking her 4th this season among 11-year-old girls and 19th in the 11-12 age group. Competing just a month after her 11th birthday, Chiang also set big best times in the 500 free (5:30.36) and 400 IM (4:49.61) at the meet, ranking her 21st and 6th, respectively, among 11-year-old girls this season. She also set PBs in the 200 free (2:05.09), 100 back (1:05.56) and 200 IM (2:18.90). One week later at the Washington State Senior SCY Championships, she set more best times in the 200 back (2:20.68), 50 fly (30.55) and 200 fly (2:28.68).
Jacob Lee, 12, Rose Bowl Aquatics (CA): Lee put up four best times at the SCAT Winter Age Group Invitational Dec. 12-14 in San Clemente, Calif., highlighted by his swim in the 100 breast. After breaking 1:03 for the first time at the beginning of November in 1:02.23, Lee clocked 1:02.01 at the meet in December, ranking him 37th all-time in the boys’ 11-12 age group and 1st this season. The Rose Bowl Aquatics member also set personal bests in the 50 free (24.36), 100 free (55.32) and 100 IM (1:01.16). Back in action in early January at the Pacific Coast All-Stars meet last weekend, Lee won the 11-12 boys 50 breast in 28.49, just shy of his PB set in October (28.30).
Since 1972, Spectrum Aquatics has been setting the standard for excellence in competition. Backed by a team of driven professionals, we proudly design and manufacture high-quality, custom products in our Missoula, Montana facility. With unmatched expertise and an unrelenting commitment to innovation, we don’t just meet expectations—we exceed them, delivering superior solutions tailored to your specific needs and pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in competitive swimming.
You know you have a proper enduro motorcycle on your hands when it has Graham Jarvis’ credentials behind it. That’s the Jarv-E project, born from a collaboration between Jarvis and Austrian motorcycle engineer David Freidinger.
Jarvis has been contributing to riding development, testing, race strategy, and long-term vision for the project. That means the Jarv-E isn’t just another ambitious electric motorcycle; it’s a proper hard-enduro bike designed for technical trail riding.
For those who don’t know, Jarvis has been a mainstay in trial races and the hard enduro scene for as long as I can remember. He has seven Red Bull Romaniacs championships, five Hells Gate championships, four Scottish Six Days Trial triumphs, and five British Trials championships to his name.
The Jarv-E is a proper hard-enduro bike designed for technical trail riding
Jarv-E
Who better to come up with a purpose-built moto like this? The Jarv-E is meant for “technical climbs, balance moves, rock gardens, and modern extreme riding.” It offers “more adjustability than any other electric enduro bike, from chassis balance to regen, throttle response, and ergonomics.”
The bike is powered by a 5.6-kWh battery, which takes about 1.5 hours to go from empty to full. And in case you don’t want to wait that long, you can simply swap the battery out for another, thanks to a rapid-release battery system that allows for 30-second swaps.
The battery retains 80% of its capacity after 500 charge cycles. As for run time, you can expect a fully charged battery to last you for 1.5 to 2 hours in Fast Race mode, 3 to 4 hours in Mixed Enduro mode, and a whopping 5 hours in Eco mode. All of these are expertly designed, pre-programmed riding modes developed in collaboration with Graham Jarvis.
The Jarv-E is born from a collaboration between Jarvis and Austrian motorcycle engineer David Freidinger
Jarv-E
A peak power of 50 kW (67 hp) and a dry weight of 209 lb (95 kg) mean you get a rather impressive power-to-weight ratio of 0.3206 hp/lb. The Jarv-E also lets you adjust things like the power output, e-clutch responsiveness, and regen breaking to help take on any trail.
The chassis comprises a Chromoly race frame and a custom CNC-milled swingarm with triple clamps. You get a traditional off-road-focused 21/18-inch race spec wheel setup on Sirris F43 High Performance suspension.
The moto can climb inclines up to 45 degrees – a feat most electric motorcycles dressed as dirt bikes can’t offer. Aside from the hardware, there’s been plenty of thought put into the software, too. You can take full command of your Jarv-E right from your phone via a dedicated app. It lets you keep track of all ride data and enable configuration changes – all in real-time.
The Jarv-E comes with a rapid-release battery system that allows for 30-second battery swaps
Jarv-E
The bike is intended as a limited-edition production model, with only 100 individually numbered units to be made and delivered across the globe. As of now, pre-orders are open for EU customers, while there’s a waitlist for folks in the USA (where certification is currently in progress).
Is this the first-ever off-road electric? Certainly not. With the likes of the Stark Varg MX, there are credible options out there for off-road enthusiasts. But what the Jarv-E offers is proper enduro credentials with a rider-led philosophy, all coming from the hands of someone who’s been there, done that. Features like the quick battery swap, 90-minute fast charging, and a mobile app to tweak juts about everything on the bike are all important touches that’ll help make this feel like a proper enduro.
Pre-orders are open for EU customers, while there’s a waitlist for folks in the USA (where certification is currently in progress)
Jarv-E
For all that Jarv-E offers, it likely won’t come cheap, and that’s alright. Not all EVs need to wear the affordable badge. An odd few of them can be just proper motorcycles built with proper motorcyclists. And maybe that’s what the electric space needs more of at the moment.
Having said that, pricing is yet to be revealed. And as you’d expect, the Jarv-E is not street legal just yet, though homologation is in the plans. Production is due to start in April 2026, with the bike coming with a two-year comprehensive warranty.
Southern Transitional Council faces uncertain future amid internal divisions over plans to disband with its leader in exile.
Published On 10 Jan 202610 Jan 2026
Share
Thousands of Yemenis have taken to the streets in Aden to show support for the Southern Transitional Council (STC) amid conflicting reports about the separatist group’s purported plans to disband following deadly confrontations with Saudi Arabia-backed forces.
STC supporters chanted slogans against Saudi Arabia and Yemen’s internationally backed government in demonstrations on Saturday in Aden’s Khor Maksar district, one of the group’s strongholds.
Recommended Stories
list of 3 itemsend of list
The crowd waved the flag of the former South Yemen, which was an independent state between 1967 and 1990.
“Today, the people of the south gathered from all provinces in the capital, Aden, to reiterate what they have been saying consistently for years and throughout the last month: we want an independent state,” protester Yacoub al-Safyani told the AFP news agency.
The public show of solidarity came after a successful Saudi-backed offensive to drive the STC out of parts of southern and eastern Yemen that it had seized towards the end of last year.
The confrontations exposed heightened tensions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, a top ally that the Saudi authorities have accused of backing the STC.
The group had taken over the provinces of Hadramout, on the border with Saudi Arabia, and al-Mahra, a land mass representing about half the country.
After weeks of Saudi-led efforts to de-escalate, Yemeni government forces, backed by the Gulf country, launched an attack on the STC, forcing the separatists out of Hadramout, the presidential palace in Aden and military camps in al-Mahra.
On Friday, an STC delegation that travelled to Riyadh for talks had announced the dissolution of the group in an apparent admission of defeat.
Secretary-General Abdulrahman Jalal al-Sebaihi said the group would shut down all of its bodies and offices inside and outside of Yemen, citing internal disagreements and mounting regional pressure.
However, Anwar al-Tamimi, an STC spokesman, contested the decision, writing on X that only the full council could take such steps under its president – highlighting internal divisions within the separatist movement.
During Saturday’s protest in Aden, STC supporters held up posters of the group’s leader Aidarous al-Zubaidi, who was smuggled from Aden to the UAE this week after failing to turn up to the talks in the Saudi capital.
Saudi-backed forces have accused the UAE of helping him escape on a flight that was tracked to a military airport in Abu Dhabi.
Authorities in Aden that are aligned with Yemen’s Saudi-backed government on Friday had ordered a ban on demonstrations in the southern city, citing security concerns, according to an official directive seen by Reuters.
The largest anti-government demonstrations to rock Iran in recent years intensified Friday night, fueling fears of growing fatalities as authorities battle to suppress the protests.
Social media footage trickling out of Iran amid a blanket shutdown of internet and telecommunications networks showed hundreds of thousands marching and chanting anti-regime slogans across the country, with graphic scenes of bodies lying in blood. Other clips showed that the elderly made up many of the protesters.
Separate mobile-camera footage from Fardis, a city about 50 kilometers (31 miles) west of Tehran, showed at least seven bodies covered in blood inside a building. In the videos, people are seen bandaging the head and patching an eye of another individual, while a voice says at least 10 people were killed by gunfire. None of the footage could be independently verified by Bloomberg.
Security forces have arrested nearly 200 “leaders of terrorist groups,” seizing ammunition, hand grenades and Molotov cocktails, Tasnim reported Saturday, citing an informed security official. Iran’s prosecutor general warned that all detainees would be charged as an “enemy of God” — a broadly defined offense punishable by death under Islamic law in the country.
Mohammad Movahedi Azad said all “rioters” would face the same charge, “whether an individual has assisted rioters and terrorists” or “whether they are mercenaries who have taken up arms.” He said trial proceedings will be carried out without any delay and “without leniency, compassion, or indulgence,” the state-run IRIB News reported.
The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency said Friday that at least 65 people have been killed and 2,311 arrested since protests began on Dec. 28, when traders in Tehran protested a currency crisis and worsening living conditions. The demonstrations have since spread nationwide.
Thirty-eight of the fatalities were identified in Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, Ilam, Kermanshah, and Fars provinces in central and western Iran, according to the Human Rights Activists group. Time magazine reported Friday that at least 217 protesters have died in Tehran, mostly by live ammunition, citing a doctor in the capital.
Internet-monitoring group NetBlocks said in an X posting that a nationwide internet blackout remained in place in Iran as of Saturday. People inside the country appeared largely cut off from international online services afternoon local time, with many users worldwide reporting they had been unable to get in touch with loved ones at home for almost two days.
The protests over Thursday and Friday — Iran’s weekend — followed a call by Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the country’s former shah who’s positioning himself as an opposition leader. He urged demonstrators again to return to the streets after 6 p.m. local time on Saturday and Sunday.
“Our goal is no longer merely to take to the streets,” the US-based, 65-year-old Pahlavi said in an X posting. “The goal is to prepare to seize city centers and hold them.” Pahlavi urged workers in oil, gas and transportation industries to begin a nationwide strike, and said he is “preparing to return to the homeland.”
Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi arrived in Tehran on Saturday, Iranian media reported. The visit comes amid rising tensions between the US and Iran over the Islamic Republic’s handling of protests, a day after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said it was unclear whether Albusaidi was carrying “a message from anywhere.” Oman mediated five rounds of nuclear talks between Tehran and Washington last year, which stalled after US and Israeli attacks on Iran in June.
State TV played down the protests on Saturday, saying security forces had largely contained the demonstrations on Friday after what it described as unrest by “armed terrorists” in Tehran and other cities the night before.
Iran’s regular army signaled its loyalty to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, saying it will “monitor enemy movements in the region and firmly safeguard the nation’s interests, strategic infrastructure, and public property” under the 86-year-old leader, the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported.
Chanting Crowds
Iranian authorities have so far refrained from releasing an official tally of fatalities among protesters or security forces. State-affiliated media reported at least a dozen deaths among police and Basij volunteer militia forces since Thursday. Tasnim said “armed terrorists” killed several police personnel in gunfire on Thursday.
Violence also broke out in Zahedan, a Sunni-majority city in south-western Iran and a long-standing flashpoint for deadly security incidents. The Norwegian-registered Hengaw Organization for Human Rights said security forces opened fire on demonstrators after Friday prayers, leaving several wounded.
State media published images of several burned buildings in Tehran, while a social media video purportedly showed a municipality building in Karaj, west of the capital, engulfed in flames.
Chants recorded in footage included “Death to the dictator,” “No Gaza, no Lebanon, my life for Iran,” and “This is the year of blood; Seyyed Ali will be toppled,” referring to Khamenei, who on Friday repeated his pledge to quash protesters.
While the US has so far been reluctant to embrace Pahlavi as a potential replacement for the Iranian government, President Donald Trump has warned the regime repeatedly against killing protesters.
On Friday, the leaders of France, the UK and Germany also called on the regime to “exercise restraint, to refrain from violence, and to uphold the fundamental rights of Iran’s citizens.”
Watch: Video filmed by ICE agent who shot Minneapolis woman has emerged
A video filmed by the US immigration agent who fatally shot a woman in Minneapolis on Wednesday has emerged, showing the moments before gunfire rang out.
The 47-second footage, obtained by conservative news outlet Alpha News, which is based in Minnesota, shows Renee Nicole Good sitting behind the wheel of her car and speaking to the officer.
US Vice-President JD Vance shared the clip on social media, commenting that the agent had acted in self-defence. Local officials have insisted the woman posed no danger.
Good’s wife has paid tribute to the 37-year-old, saying the pair were trying to support their neighbours when she was shot. Her death has sparked protests across the US.
President Donald Trump’s administration says Good tried to run over the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer in an act of “domestic terrorism” after blocking the road and impeding the agency’s work.
Democratic Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has described that account as “garbage” based on the video footage.
The BBC has asked the homeland security department and the White House for comment on the new video that emerged on Friday.
The footage starts with the officer getting out of his car and filming Good’s vehicle and registration plate while he walks around the Honda SUV. A dog is in the backseat.
Good says: “That’s fine dude. I’m not mad at you.”
Her wife, Becca Good, is standing on the street filming the interaction with her mobile phone. She tells the ICE agent: “That’s OK, we don’t change our plates every morning just so you know. It will be the same plate when you come talk to us later.”
She adds: “You want to come at us? You want to come at us? I say go and get yourself some lunch, big boy.”
Another agent approaches Good on the driver’s side and uses an expletive as he says: “Get out of the car.”
The agent filming the clip moves in front of Good’s car as she reverses.
In a chaotic couple of seconds, she turns the wheel to the right and pulls forwards.
The camera jerks up to the sky. “Woah, woah!” a voice says, as bangs are heard.
In the final part of the video the car is seen veering down the road. The ICE agent swears.
Other clips released previously from the scene show the maroon SUV crashed into the side of the road after the woman was shot by the agent.
The officer appears to stay on his feet, and is later seen in other videos walking towards Good’s crashed car.
Federal officials say the agent was injured and treated in hospital. The FBI is investigating the incident.
An earlier video shows the incident from another perspective
When asked about the video at the White House on Friday, President Trump said: “You have agitators and we will always be protecting ICE, and we’re always going to be protecting our border patrol and our law enforcement.”
On Friday, Vance reposted the video on X, and defended the agent’s actions, saying: “The reality is that his life was endangered and he fired in self-defence.”
White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt also reposted the video, saying the media had smeared an ICE agent who had “properly defended himself from being run over”.
Good’s wife told local media the pair had gone to the scene of immigration enforcement activity to support neighbours.
“We had whistles,” Becca Good said. “They had guns.”
When speaking about Good – a mother-of-three, including a six-year-old son – she said “kindness radiated out of her”.
“We were raising our son to believe that no matter where you come from or what you look like, all of us deserve compassion and kindness,” she added.
Demonstrators turned out for a third night of protests on Friday over the killing of Good.
The Minneapolis Police Department told BBC News that at least 30 people were detained, cited and released after protests in the downtown area.
Photos showed protesters gathered outside a hotel in the city, believed to be where some ICE agents were staying.
Minnesota’s Department of Public Safety said it assisted police officers with arresting people suspected of unlawful assembly, after responding to an area around the Canopy Hotel in the city and giving dispersal orders.
The public safety department said it received “information that demonstrations were no longer peaceful and reports of damage to property”.
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz earlier said he had activated the state’s National Guard to help with security of the protests.
On Friday, Minnesota officials said they would open an inquiry into the shooting after saying they had been frozen out of the federal investigation.
Trump was asked by a reporter at the White House on Friday whether the FBI should share its findings with Minnesota, and said: “Well normally I would, but they’re crooked officials.”
Hennepin County’s top prosecutor Mary Moriarty and the state’s Democratic attorney general, Keith Ellison, said they were launching their own probe.
It came a day after the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension said the FBI had initially pledged a joint investigation, then reversed course.
One federal agency that is not looking into the shooting is the US justice department’s Civil Rights Division, which has in the past investigated alleged excessive use of force by law enforcement.
But prosecutors have advised its criminal section that there will be no investigation in this case, sources told the BBC’s US partner, CBS News.
Governor Walz, a Democrat, has accused the Trump administration of blocking state officials, but Vice-President Vance said it was a federal matter.