
Meta stock price target maintained at $1,117 by Rosenblatt on nuclear power deals
Rosenblatt maintains Meta stock price target at $1,117 amidst nuclear power deals.
Swiss ski resort bar owner detained following fatal New Year’s Eve fire
One of the two co-owners of the Swiss bar where 40 people died in a fire on New Year’s Eve has been detained.
Swiss prosecutors said Jacques Moretti, a French national, was a potential flight risk. He and his wife Jessica, who is also French, are suspected of manslaughter by negligence, bodily harm by negligence and arson by negligence.
The blaze at Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana left 116 people injured. Many of the victims were aged under 20. The fire is believed to have been started by sparklers in champagne bottles raised too close to the ceiling during celebrations.
It emerged this week that the bar in the popular ski resort had not undergone safety checks for five years.
The decision to detain Jacques Moretti came after he and his wife, Jessica, who own the bar together, were on Friday questioned by prosecutors in Sion, a town in the canton of Valais.
Under Swiss law, the subject of an investigation is kept in custody until a court decision is made within 48 hours.
The couple had been earlier placed under criminal investigation.
On Friday, Jessica Moretti told reporters: “My constant thoughts go to the victims and those who are fighting today.
“This was an unthinkable tragedy and never could we have imagined this. It happened in our bar and I want to say I’m sorry,” she added as she walked through the streets of Sion surrounded by police.
The co-owners had earlier said they were “devastated”, pledging “full co-operation” with the ongoing investigation.
The prosecutors have said they believe the fire started when people celebrating the New Year raised champagne bottles with sparklers attached, setting light to sound-insulating foam on the ceiling of the basement bar.
On Friday, Switzerland staged a minute’s silence on a national day of mourning for the victims of the fire.
Church bells then rang across the country for five minutes.
Trains and trams came to a halt and Zurich airport briefly paused operations.
At a local commemoration staged in Crans-Montana, there was a standing ovation for firefighters.
The news that the bar had not been inspected for five years has shocked families of the victims.
Romain Jordan, who represents some of the families, said earlier this week the “staggering number of breaches and shortcomings in the inspections raises the question of whether the municipality should be investigated with even greater urgency”.
Venues like Le Constellation should have been checked annually, but Crans-Montana Mayor Nicolas Feraud said on Tuesday he could not explain why this had not been done for so long at that bar.
“We regret that – we owe it to the families and we will accept the responsibility,” he said.
He added that sparklers would be banned in local venues.
Most of the victims of the fire were young – eight were under the age of 16.
Many of the injured have severe burns and are being treated in Switzerland and other European countries.
The funerals of some of those who died have been taking place.
Without health care and social services, the U.S. saw a decrease in jobs in 2025.
Without hiring from the health care and social assistance industries, the U.S. economy lost jobs in 2025—an uncomfortable reality hidden beneath modest payroll gains and an improved unemployment rate.
Nonfarm payrolls rose by 50,000 in December, while the unemployment rate edged down to 4.4%, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday. But the December gain did little to change the broader picture: employers added just 584,000 jobs in all of 2025, a sharp decline from 2 million jobs in 2024. It was the weakest year for job growth outside of a recession since the early 2000s, Heather Long, chief economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union, told Fortune.
“This really caps off a year of anemic job gains,” Long said shortly after the report came out. “It’s fair to call this a hiring recession or a jobless boom.”
Markets initially reacted positively to the report but later gave up gains. The S&P 500 was flat and Nasdaq inched up slightly lower. Bond yields were little changed, suggesting investors saw the report as weak but not weak enough to force the Federal Reserve into near-term rate cuts.
Yet under the hood of a relatively stable unemployment rate, the composition of the job growth remains starkly narrow. Nearly all of last year’s net job creation came from health care and social assistance, sectors that rely heavily on government funding. According to Long, roughly 85% of all jobs added in 2025 were created by April, with little momentum afterward.
In fact, health care alone accounted for about 405,000 of those gains, while social assistance added roughly 308,000. Together, those two sectors contributed more than the entire net increase of 584,000 jobs overall last year, meaning the rest of the economy shed jobs on balance, Long said.
Elsewhere, hiring was flat or negative across much of the economy. Blue collar jobs were heavily hit: manufacturing failed to rebound, and construction posted only marginal gains and mining. Meanwhile, wholesale trade, transportation and warehousing lost jobs over the year. Federal government employment also declined sharply as the White House pushed to shrink the workforce.
“There was no manufacturing revival in 2025,” Long said. “Manufacturing was already weak, and the tariffs didn’t help. After that, you started to see other sectors getting worse too.”
White-collar hiring was no stronger. Professional and business services and the information sector both posted net job losses for the year, reflecting persistent layoffs in tech and corporate roles.
“In many ways, 2025 was both a white-collar and a blue-collar jobs recession,” Long said.
The unemployment rate, meanwhile, has remained relatively low—but that stability is increasingly misleading, economists say. The jobless rate has risen gradually from 4.0% in January to 4.4% in December, and there are now about 583,000 more unemployed people than a year ago.
In addition, long-term unemployment has climbed, and more workers are stuck in part-time jobs because they can’t find full-time work.
“It’s a slowly weakening job picture,” Long said. “Whatever metric you want to focus on, that story shows up.”
Recent revisions added to the sense of fragility. The Labor Department revised October payrolls down to a loss of 173,000 jobs and November down to a gain of 56,000, confirming that hiring late in the year was weaker than initially reported.
The “jobless boom” is also being sustained by an immigration crackdown that has lowered the labor supply. By reducing the pool of available workers, the administration has effectively reduced the breakeven bar for the labor market; because there are fewer people looking for work, the unemployment rate remains low even as the private-sector engine hits stall speed.
Analysts at Jefferies were cautious to interpret the weak December payroll figure on its own, pointing to firmer signals in the household survey, which they described as “very encouraging.” They noted that employment rose by 232,000 in December while the number of unemployed fell by 279,000.
“The decline in the unemployment rate came from more of the right reasons than we anticipated,” Jefferies economist Thomas Simons wrote, adding that broader underemployment also improved.
Simons also emphasized that December jobs data are among the noisiest of the year and should not be over-interpreted.
“There is an enormous amount of seasonal noise this month, and even more in January,” he said, noting that upcoming annual benchmark revisions could “re-contextualize the path of job growth over the course of last year.”
That backdrop helps explain the Fed’s policy direction. Despite inflation remaining above target, the central bank has prioritized supporting the labor market. Wage growth remains relatively strong—average hourly earnings rose 3.8% over the past year—but Long said that strength is unlikely to persist.
“That was the number that surprised me,” she said. “Wage gains are still pretty strong, but I expect them to cool. Workers can feel they’ve lost bargaining power. It’s not just job seekers—people who still have jobs are frustrated too.”
Looking ahead, Long expects the Fed to pause in January, with a possible rate cut in March if hiring continues to lag. “This jobless boom is very uneasy on Main Street,” she said. “There’s justification for more cuts if this continues.”
Achieving Rank #5 All-Time in the 15-16 Age Group with a 45-Mile Run
Swim of the Week is brought to you by arena, a SwimSwam partner.
Disclaimer: Swim of the Week is not meant to be a conclusive selection of the best overall swim of the week, but rather one Featured Swim to be explored in deeper detail. The Swim of the Week is an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of one of the many fast swims this week, perhaps a swim that slipped through the cracks as others grabbed the headlines, or a race we didn’t get to examine as closely in the flood of weekly meets.
Age group phenom and multi-time World Junior champion Audrey Derivaux kicked off 2026 in style on Sunday at the South Jersey Aquatic Club (SJAC) Distance Challenge in Voorhees, N.J., recording one of the fastest 1650 freestyle performances ever in the girls’ 15-16 age group.
The 16-year-old Jersey Wahoos product dropped a time of 15:45.97 in the event, dropping more than 20 seconds off her previous best time of 16:06.70, set at the same meet last year, and climbing up to 5th all-time in the girls’ 15-16 age group.
Split Comparison
| Derivaux, Jan 2025 | |
| 25.99 | 26.50 |
| 54.14 (28.15) | 54.61 (28.11) |
| 1:22.77 (28.63) | 1:22.88 (28.27) |
| 1:51.79 (29.02) | 1:51.35 (28.47) |
| 2:20.89 (29.10) | 2:19.91 (28.56) |
| 2:49.64 (28.75) | 2:48.60 (28.69) |
| 3:18.84 (29.20) | 3:17.53 (28.93) |
| 3:48.20 (29.36) | 3:46.28 (28.75) |
| 4:17.56 (29.36) | 4:14.97 (28.69) |
| 4:46.78 (29.22) | 4:43.73 (28.76) |
| 5:15.99 (29.21) | 5:12.55 (28.82) |
| 5:45.13 (29.14) | 5:41.39 (28.84) |
| 6:14.49 (29.36) | 6:10.25 (28.86) |
| 6:43.88 (29.39) | 6:39.00 (28.75) |
| 7:13.39 (29.51) | 7:07.71 (28.71) |
| 7:42.55 (29.16) | 7:36.61 (28.90) |
| 8:12.11 (29.56) | 8:05.52 (28.91) |
| 8:41.51 (29.40) | 8:34.17 (28.65) |
| 9:11.08 (29.57) | 9:02.90 (28.73) |
| 9:40.62 (29.54) | 9:31.65 (28.75) |
| 10:10.16 (29.54) | 10:00.37 (28.72) |
| 10:39.83 (29.67) | 10:29.20 (28.83) |
| 11:09.48 (29.65) | 10:58.08 (28.88) |
| 11:39.34 (29.86) | 11:26.99 (28.91) |
| 12:09.04 (29.70) | 11:56.08 (29.09) |
| 12:38.72 (29.68) | 12:24.98 (28.90) |
| 13:08.75 (30.03) | 12:53.85 (28.87) |
| 13:38.58 (29.83) | 13:22.96 (29.11) |
| 14:08.56 (29.98) | 13:51.95 (28.99) |
| 14:38.48 (29.92) | 14:20.93 (28.98) |
| 15:08.46 (29.98) | 14:49.79 (28.86) |
| 15:38.68 (30.22) | 15:18.74 (28.95) |
| 16:06.70 (28.02) | 15:45.97 (27.23) |
Previously ranked 36th all-time, Derivaux becomes the 19th 15-16 swimmer to break 16 minutes and just the 10th to go sub-15:50.
The four swimmers ranked ahead of her all own lofty resumes, led by the greatest female swimmer ever, Katie Ledecky, along with Olympic silver and four-time World Championship medalist Katie Grimes, former world record holder in the LC 1500 free (LC), Kate Ziegler, and former age group standout and accomplished open water swimmer Becca Mann.
The swimmer Derivaux now sits directly ahead of in the rankings is Tiffany Cohen, a double Olympic champion in the women’s 400 and 800 free at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, who set the NAG Record at 15:46.54 back in 1983. The swim also stood as the American Record for six years before it was broken by Janet Evans, while it stood as the NAG for 22 years before Ziegler took it down in 2005.
All-Time Rankings, Girls’ 15-16 1650 Freestyle (SCY)
- Katie Ledecky (Nation’s Capital Swim Club), 15:15.17 – 2013
- Katie Grimes (Sandpipers of Nevada), 15:26.17 – 2022
- Kate Ziegler (The Fish), 15:40.89 – 2005
- Becca Mann (Clearwater Aquatic Team), 15:45.33 – 2013
- Audrey Derivaux (Jersey Wahoos), 15:45.97 – 2026
- Tiffany Cohen (Mission Viejo Nadadores), 15:46.54 – 1983
- Erica Sullivan (Sandpipers of Nevada), 15:47.39 – 2016
- Paige McKenna (Nation’s Capital Swim Club), 15:48.07 – 2019
- Bella Sims (Sandpipers of Nevada), 15:48.70 – 2021
- Kim Linehan (Texas Longhorn Aquatic Club), 15:49.10 – 1979
Derivaux also got an official split at the 1000-yard mark of the race, presumably to the feet given her splits, and her time of 9:31.65 moves her up to 11th all-time in 15-16 history. Her previous best time stood at 9:40.62, set at the same meet last year on the way to her 1650 time.
All-Time Rankings, Girls’ 15-16 1000 Freestyle (SCY)
- Katie Ledecky (Nation’s Capital Swim Club), 9:14.22 – 2013
- Claire Weinstein (Sandpipers of Nevada), 9:17.85 – 2023
- Kate Ziegler (The Fish), 9:25.51 – 2005
- Katie Grimes (Sandpipers of Nevada), 9:26.10 – 2022
- Katie Hoff (North Baltimore Aquatic Club), 9:27.56 – 2006
- Erica Sullivan (Sandpipers of Nevada), 9:29.91 – 2016
- Kayla Han (La Mirada Armada), 9:30.10 – 2024
- Jane Skillman (Peddie School), 9:30.34 – 1990
- Tiffany Cohen (Mission Viejo Nadadores), 9:30.65 – 1983
- Bella Sims (Sandpipers of Nevada), 9:31.16 – 2021
- Audrey Derivaux (Jersey Wahoos), 9:31.65 – 2026
Incredibly, she also swam the fastest 500 free of her career during the mile, though the split won’t count as an official time. Derivaux turned in 4:43.73 at the 500, undercutting lifetime best of 4:44.10 set in March 2024. She only raced the 500 once in 2025, clocking 4:44.43 back in March.
With Rylee Erisman reclassifying to the girls’ high school class of 2026, Emily Wolf (4:41.98) and Alyssa Ton (4:43.39) are the only swimmers in the class of 2027 who have been faster in the 500 than Derivaux’s 4:43.73 opening split.
Committed to Texas, Derivaux is the top-ranked recruit in the girls’ high school class of 2027, and she previously ranked 2nd in the class in the 1650 free behind North Carolina Aquatic Club’s Daisy Collins (16:02.94), but with this swim, she rockets to the top of the class by a massive margin.
In addition to that, Derivaux is also now faster than every swimmer in the girls’ high school class of 2026, with CSP Tideriders’ Sydney Schoeck owning the top time at 15:52.26.
Incredibly versatile, Derivaux is the reigning World Junior champion in the girls’ 200 back, 200 fly and 200 IM, and she also won silver in the 100 fly and placed 4th in the 400 IM at the championships last August.
As for the distance events in long course, she’s only raced the 1500 free once in the big pool, done back when she was 11 in 2021 (18:24.26).
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Tiny house offers spacious living experience similar to an apartment-sized home
Designed as a permanent home for a couple of enthusiastic travelers, the Bespoke Base doesn’t compromise on comfort. Its spacious interior is arranged on one floor and looks more like a compact apartment than a typical tiny house.
The Bespoke Base was designed by New Zealand’s South Base Homes, with architect Chris Pyemont, for clients who had spent seven years exploring the open road in their RV and were looking for somewhere to call home.
With a length of 12 m (39 ft), this model is on the larger side of the tiny house spectrum and up there with the big North American models like Timbercraft Tiny Homes’ Denali XL. It’s not clear whether it’s based on a trailer or not, but the home won’t be moved around regularly. Its exterior is finished in redwood cladding.
South Base Homes
The home is accessed through the enclosed porch, which leads into a combined living/kitchen area. By tiny house standards, this looks very spacious, and generous glazing helps open it up to the outdoors.
The L-shaped kitchen includes a fridge/freezer, an oven, a propane-powered cooktop, a microwave, and a sink. Additionally, there’s a pantry with pull-out drawers, breakfast bar seating for up to three people, and a custom glass art splashback created by Kiwi artist Lucy G. Adjacent to the kitchen is the living area, which incorporates bench seating with integrated storage, a large wall-mounted TV, and a surround sound system. A Wi-Fi-controlled heat pump allows the owners to manage the interior temperature remotely.
There’s just one bedroom in the Bespoke Base and thanks to its single floor layout, it has ample headroom to stand upright. It also features large windows and a double bed, plus lots of storage space.
The Bespoke Base’s bathroom is accessed from the bedroom and is quite spacious for a tiny house. It contains a glass-enclosed shower, a vanity sink, and a flushing toilet. There’s also a stacked washing machine and dryer, and some storage space.
South Base Homes
The Bespoke Base model pictured has been delivered to its customers in New Zealand, but South Base Homes’ models start at NZD 200,000 (roughly US$114,000).
Source: South Base Homes
As Protests Escalate, Iran Faces Internet Blackout
new video loaded: Iran Plunges Into Internet Blackout as Protests Intensify

By Axel Boada, Sanjana Varghese and Aric Toler
January 9, 2026
Lawsuit filed by Salt-N-Pepa against Universal Music Group for ownership of master recordings has been dismissed
A US federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by Grammy-winning rap duo Salt-N-Pepa against Universal Music Group, ruling that the artists never owned the copyrights to their sound recordings and therefore cannot reclaim them.
Judge Denise Cote of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York issued an opinion and order on Thursday (January 8) granting UMG’s motion to dismiss both claims in the case, which you can read in full here.
Cheryl James and Sandra Denton, professionally known as Salt-N-Pepa, filed the lawsuit in May 2025 seeking to regain their copyrights and physical master recordings. You can read the complaint in full here.
The duo attempted to exercise their termination rights under Section 203 of the Copyright Act, which allows artists to reclaim copyright ownership 35 years after an initial transfer.
Salt-N-Pepa served their Notice of Termination on UMG in March 2022, with the earliest termination date listed as May 15, 2024.
However, Judge Cote ruled that the 1986 agreements on which Salt-N-Pepa based their claim “do not indicate that Plaintiffs ever owned the copyrights to the sound recordings or that they granted a transfer of those rights to anyone else.”
In other words, because Salt-N-Pepa never owned the copyrights in the first place, they cannot use Section 203 of the Copyright Act to reclaim them. The termination provision only applies to artists who previously owned and then transferred their copyrights.
The judge’s decision centered on three agreements executed on May 15, 1986. Salt-N-Pepa signed a recording agreement with Noise In The Attic Productions, Inc. (NITA), a company owned by their producer Hurby Azor. That same day, Azor entered into a distribution agreement with Next Plateau Records, and Salt-N-Pepa signed an inducement letter addressed to Next Plateau Records.
The 1986 NITA Recording Agreement stated that NITA “shall be the sole and exclusive owner of any and all rights, title and/or interest in and to master recordings recorded hereunder, including but not limited to the worldwide sound copyrights therein.”
The 1986 agreement between Azor and Next Plateau Records then transferred those rights, stating that Azor “hereby sells, transfers and assigns to Company [Next Plateau Records]… all aforesaid right, title and interest in and to such Sides including without limitation the sound recording copyright.”
Judge Cote wrote: “It was only Azor and NITA that granted a transfer of rights in 1986 to Next Plateau Records.”
Salt-N-Pepa had argued that their inducement letter constituted a direct grant of their rights to Next Plateau Records.
However, Judge Cote rejected this interpretation, noting that in the letter, Salt-N-Pepa agreed to the representations in the distribution agreement, which included NITA’s representation that it was “the sole and exclusive owner” of the copyrights.
“The statutory text in § 203 is clear: Plaintiffs can only terminate copyright transfers that they executed,” Judge Cote wrote. “They cannot terminate a copyright grant executed by NITA.”
The judge also dismissed Salt-N-Pepa’s conversion claim, which alleged that UMG “intentionally and substantially interfered with Plaintiffs’ possession of their Master Tapes.”
Judge Cote ruled that Salt-N-Pepa failed to plausibly allege their ownership of the Master Tapes.
Thursday’s memorandum noted that UMG is the “successor-in-interest” to both Next Plateau Records and London Records. On May 15, 2024, UMG removed dozens of Salt-N-Pepa’s sound recordings from streaming platforms.
“Even with the court’s complete rejection of their claims, we remain open and willing to find a resolution to the matter and turn the page so we can focus our efforts on working together to amplify Salt-N-Pepa’s legacy for generations to come.”
UMG spokesperson
A Universal Music Group spokesperson told MBW: “While we are gratified that the court dismissed this baseless lawsuit, it should never have been brought in the first place. Prior to this suit—and without any legal obligation to do so—we made multiple attempts to resolve the matter amicably, improve the artists’ compensation, and ensure that Salt-N-Pepa’s fans had access to their music.
“Even with the court’s complete rejection of their claims, we remain open and willing to find a resolution to the matter and turn the page so we can focus our efforts on working together to amplify Salt-N-Pepa’s legacy for generations to come.”
Music Business Worldwide
Algeria and Nigeria face off in AFCON 2025: Team news, start time, and lineups announced | Football News
Who: Algeria vs Nigeria
What: CAF Africa Cup of Nations
Where: Marrakech Stadium in Marrakesh, Morocco
When: Saturday at 5pm (16:00 GMT)
How to follow: We’ll have all the build-up on Al Jazeera Sport from 13:00 GMT in advance of our text commentary stream.
A test of a formidable defence against a lethal attack will be on display when Algeria take on Nigeria in the Africa Cup of Nations’ (AFCON) most eagerly-awaited quarterfinal in Marrakesh on Saturday.
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Algeria have produced a near-flawless defensive display at AFCON 2025, conceding just once in four matches. But their resolute backline now faces a stern challenge against a sharp-shooting Nigerian side that has scored a tournament-high 12 goals.
The deadly duo of Ademola Lookman and Victor Osimhen coming up against the reliable Luca Zidane promises a fascinating showdown.
But can the Nigerian attackers put their on-field issues from the previous match behind them and challenge the Algerian defence?
Here’s everything you need to know about Algeria vs Nigeria:
What was the feud between Osimhen and Lookman?
In the 63rd minute of the match against Mozambique, while Nigeria were 3-0 up, Osimhen appeared unhappy with Lookman’s decision to take on defenders himself rather than pass the ball to him during an attacking move.
Osimhen squared up to Lookman and gestured angrily in his direction, prompting captain Wilfried Ndidi to step in and break the fight. His intervention proved ineffective, however, as Mozambique defender Reinildo eventually shoved Osimhen away amid the confrontation.
The incident seemed to affect Osimhen’s interest thereafter, as he became increasingly disengaged from Nigeria’s play and soon signalled to the bench to be substituted. Head coach Eric Chelle obliged, introducing Moses Simon in his place.
The drama continued at the final whistle when Osimhen headed straight down the tunnel, while the rest of the Nigerian squad remained on the pitch in a post-match huddle.
Talking to reporters after the match, Lookman said: “There’s no issue. It’s just football. Always football. He is my brother.”
Coach Chelle refused to go deep into the issue, saying, “What happened on the pitch will stay in the group.”
How did Algeria reach the AFCON 2025 quarterfinals?
Algeria advanced to the knockouts with three wins out of three – against Sudan, Burkina Faso and Equatorial Guinea.
In the round of 16, they beat DR Congo 1-0 in extra time, thanks to a spectacular strike from substitute Adil Boulbina.
How did Nigeria reach the quarterfinals?
Nigeria stormed into the knockouts with a 100 per cent record as well, beating Tanzania, Tunisia and Uganda in Group C.
They began their knockout campaign with a 4-0 thrashing of Mozambique.
Who will the winner face in the semifinals?
The winner of the Algeria vs Nigeria match will face the winner of Cameroon vs Morocco.
That semifinal will be held on January 14 in Rabat.
Who are Algeria’s best players?
Winger Riyad Mahrez, widely remembered as a vital member of Leicester City’s iconic Premier League-winning campaign a decade ago, remains an evergreen figure, standing out as Algeria’s key player with three goals in four matches.
Alongside him, forwards Ibrahim Maza (two goals) and Anis Moussa (two assists) have also been influential in attack, while viewers should also watch out for Mohamed Amoura, who was Africa’s leading scorer in World Cup 2026 qualification.
Algeria’s goalkeeper, Luca Zidane, son of French great Zinedine Zidane, is also a formidable presence between the sticks, keeping clean sheets in all three appearances so far.

Who are Nigeria’s best players?
All eyes had been on Nigeria’s star striker and talisman, Osimhen, before the tournament, but it’s Lookman, who has stolen the limelight. Arguably the tournament’s best player, Lookman has bagged three goals and four assists in three appearances at AFCON 2025, proving equally influential both as a playmaker and a finisher.
Playing in the No. 10 role, Lookman has thrived as the link between midfield and attack, delivering dangerous crosses into the box and posing a constant long-range threat.
Nigeria’s attacking firepower is further bolstered by the masked Osimhen, who has yet to hit top gear at the tournament but is gradually finding his rhythm, bringing up his third goal in the last-16 clash.
Striker Akor Adams has emerged as an unsung hero after his two assists and a goal in the last game, while Alex Iwobi has been pulling the strings in the middle of the park, and captain Wilfried Ndidi has been equally influential, anchoring their midfield.

Algeria and Nigeria form guides
Algeria: W-W-W-W-L
Nigeria: W-W-W-W-L
Head-to-head
Algeria and Nigeria have met in 22 previous encounters, including both competitive and friendly matches.
Algeria have a slight edge in the head-to-head record, winning 10 times, while Nigeria have won nine times. Three games ended in a draw.
Algeria have been an AFCON bogey team for Nigeria, winning four and drawing two of nine meetings, including a 5-1 drubbing of the Super Eagles en route to winning the 1990 tournament at home.
When did Algeria and Nigeria last meet?
They met in an international friendly in September 2022 in Oran, Algeria. The North Africans won 2-1 in that fixture.
Have Algeria ever won an AFCON title?
Yes. Algeria are two-time AFCON winners, clinching the title in 1990 and 2019.
Have Nigeria ever won an AFCON title?
Yes. Nigeria are three-time AFCON champions, winning in 1980, 1994 and 2013.
Algeria team news
Algeria’s head coach, Vladimir Petkovic, will be sweating over midfielder Ismael Bennacer’s fitness after he was taken off injured in the last game early in the second half.
Algeria’s predicted lineup
Luca Zidane; Rafik Belghali, Aissa Mandi, Ramy Bensebaini, Rayan Ait Nouri; Hicham Boudaoui, Ismael Bennacer, Fares Chaibi; Riyad Mahrez, Ibrahim Maza, Mohammed Amoura
Nigeria team news
Nigeria’s head coach, Eric Chelle, has a fully fit squad at his disposal.
Nigeria’s predicted lineup
Stanley Nwabali; Bright Osayu-Samuel, Semi Ajayi, Calvin Bassey, Bruno Onyemaechi; Frank Onyeka, Wilfred Ndidi, Alex Iwobi; Ademola Lookman; Akor Adams, Victor Osimhen
Client Challenge: Overcoming Obstacles to Success
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Fresh Strikes on Ukraine Include Oreshnik Ballistic Missile Launch
ReutersRussia has used the Oreshnik ballistic missile as part of a massive overnight strike on Ukraine.
Four people were killed and 25 others injured in Kyiv on Thursday night, where loud booms could be heard for several hours, setting the sky alight with explosions.
It is only the second time that Moscow has used the Oreshnik, which was first deployed to hit the central city of Dnipro in November 2024.
Russia’s defence ministry said the strike was a response to a Ukrainian drone attack targeting Vladimir Putin’s residence in late December, which Kyiv denies carrying out.
While the ministry did not specify what had been the Oreshnik’s target, shortly before midnight (22:00 GMT) videos began circulating on social media showing numerous explosions on the outskirts of the western city of Lviv.
President Volodymyr Zelensky and Ukrainian authorities confirmed that a ballistic missile had struck infrastructure in Lviv, about 60km (40 miles) from the Polish border.
The Oreshnik is an intermediate-range, hypersonic ballistic missile, meaning it can potentially reach up to 5,500km (3,417 miles). It is thought to have a warhead that deliberately fragments during its final descent into several, independently targeted inert projectiles, causing distinctive repeated explosions moments apart.
“Such a strike close to EU and Nato border is a grave threat to the security on the European continent and a test for the transatlantic community,” Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha said.
The strike was launched “in response to [Putin’s] own hallucinations,” he added, referring to the alleged drone attack on the president’s residence in December.
The EU had immediately cast serious doubt on whether the drone strike ever happened, and last week Donald Trump said he did not think any such attack had taken place.
On Friday EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said Russia’s Oreshnik strike was meant as a warning to Europe and the US.
“Putin doesn’t want peace, Russia’s reply to diplomacy is more missiles and destruction. This deadly pattern of recurring major Russian strikes will repeat itself until we help Ukraine break it,” she wrote on X.
Zelensky said in addition to the Oreshnik, 13 ballistic missiles targeted energy facilities and civilian infrastructure overnight, along with 22 cruise missiles and 242 drones.
One damaged a building at the Qatari embassy, he added.
He accused the attacks of aiming “against the normal life of ordinary people” during a cold spell and added everything possible was being done to restore heating and electricity.
As Lviv and other western regions were targeted on Thursday night, more than a dozen missiles and hundreds of drones were deployed during the attack on Kyiv.
A paramedic was among those killed while arriving at a damaged apartment in Kyiv. The capital’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, and Zelensky said it had been a “double-tap” hit – in which the first strike is followed by a second, killing rescuers who have arrived to help the injured.
Two apartment buildings along the east bank of the Dnipro River and a high-rise building in the city’s central district were also targeted.
The power supply was disrupted in several of the city’s neighbourhoods in the middle of a particularly harsh winter and as Kyiv braces for -15C (5F) temperatures this weekend.
On Friday Klitschko urged Kyiv residents to leave temporarily if they were able to, and find warmth.
“Half of Kyiv’s apartment buildings – nearly 6,000 – are currently without heat due to damage to the capital’s critical infrastructure caused by a massive enemy attack,” he wrote on social media.
“I also appeal to residents of the capital who have the opportunity to temporarily leave the city for places with alternative sources of power and heat to do so.”
The targeting of power plants has become a constant feature of this war, with Ukraine increasingly responding in kind to Russia’s sustained attacks on energy infrastructure that regularly leave millions without access to electricity or heating.
On Thursday night, as Moscow’s attack on Ukraine was ongoing, half a million people in the Russian region of Belgorod were left without power following Ukrainian shelling of infrastructure, the local governor said.
Authorities also said that a Ukrainian strike on a Russian power plant in the city of Oryol, further north, affected the water and heating systems.




