15, November 2018
Ex-Arsenal & Cameroon star Alex Song on nightmare spell in football as he looks to rebuild his career 0
Former FC Barcelona midfielder Alex Song has revealed how he went from the Camp Nou to living in isolation, to sleeping at Rubin Kazan’s training ground within a short space of one year.
Song, who earned the last of his 41 international caps for the African champions back in 2014, seemingly had the world at his feet when the Blaugrana prised him away from the Premier League in a £15m deal in 2012.
However, after 65 games across all competitions over the space of two seasons, Song was shipped out on loan to West Ham United before joining Rubin Kazan in Russia, where his career stalled dramatically.
Song was one of several of big-name arrivals and was given huge promises over the ‘project’ that was being started at the club.
Upon his move to Kazan, Song was set to move into his own house – only to be told after six months in a hotel, that there was no property and he would now be residing at the club’s training ground.



“I spent my time sitting in my room and I would never even put the lights on when I was in there. I just sat with my computer, no television on, nothing, because I couldn’t understand any of the Russian TV,” he toldthe Telegraph.
“My whole life was just a computer and phone, and that’s not healthy. I don’t know why I didn’t switch the lights on.
“They worked, but I suppose I was feeling low and I was on my own.”
Song’s spell in Russia would get even worse as he was dropped from the first-team and not paid his wages, which eventually totalled R148m.
He faced calls from back in London on how he would pay his mortgage and fund a housing project he had set up in Cameroon.
Song eventually left the Russian Premier League side, before FIFA intervened in his case over the money owed to him – before cancelling his contract.
The veteran midfielder has since moved on to Swiss top-flight outfit FC Sion, where he is beginning to restore his career.
“To have no money coming in made it very difficult. I had all these people working for me and helping me, and I had no income of my own,” he added.
“I basically lost a year of my career in Kazan. Now I am starting games and I am happy again.”
Source: Kickoff.com





























15, November 2018
Israeli Defence Minister Lieberman resigns 0
Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman announced his resignation on Wednesday after a sharp disagreement over a Gaza ceasefire deal, throwing the government into turmoil.
“What happened yesterday — the truce combined with the process with Hamas — is capitulating to terror. It has no other meaning,” Lieberman told journalists.
“What we’re doing now as a state is buying short-term quiet, with the price being severe long-term damage to national security.”
The resignation came a day after Palestinian groups, including Hamas, announced an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire with Israel following the worst flare-up between Israel and the Palestinians in Gaza since the 2014 war.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s presented the decision to step back from a full-blown conflict as a unified one made by his Security Cabinet and based on the military’s recommendations. But his hardline ministers, Lieberman and Education Minister Naftali Bennett, opposed the cessation of hostilities.
Announcing his resignation on Wednesday, Lieberman told journalists the ceasefire was buying short-term quiet, with the price being severe long-term damage to national security.
He later added: “We should agree on a date for elections as early as possible.”
Lieberman also said his party was leaving Netanyahu’s coalition, leaving the Israeli premier with only a one-seat majority in parliament.
Elections are not due until November 2019, but Lieberman’s resignation increases the likelihood of an earlier vote.
Lieberman, a security hardliner, heads the right-wing Yisrael Beitenu party, which holds five seats in the 120-seat Knesset, or parliament.
Israel shoots, captures Palestinian after ceasefire
Despite Tuesday’s ceasefire announcement, the Israel military on Wednesday said it shot and captured a Palestinian who approached the Gaza perimeter fence and hurled grenades into Israel.
The IDF said it spotted the assailant with a knife and wire cutters and took him into custody after the grenades he hurled failed to explode.
The frontier was quiet overnight after the recent intensification in fighting which was sparked by an apparently botched Israeli intelligence raid into Gaza. Palestinian militants fired 460 rockets and mortars into Israel in a 24-hour period, while the Israeli military carried out airstrikes on 160 Gaza targets. Seven Palestinians, including five militants, were killed. In Israel, one person was killed in a rocket strike and three were critically wounded.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP and AP)