3, January 2023
Tennis legend Boris Becker back to work as Australian Open pundit 0
A month after his release from prison, Boris Becker will return as a consultant for Eurosport during the Australian Open, the first Grand Slam tournament of the season, the sports television channel announced on Tuesday.
“I am delighted that Boris Becker is returning to our Eurosport team at the Australian Open,” said Jochen Gundel, one of the managers of the German subsidiary of Warner. Bros Discovery, the chain’s parent company.
“Since 2017, Boris has been an integral part of the tennis broadcasts on Eurosport.”
The German six-time Grand Slam champion was released from prison in England last month after serving eight months of a two-and-a-half year sentence for flouting insolvency rules.
Becker was found guilty of hiding £2.5 million ($3.1 million) of assets and loans to avoid paying debts.
His lawyer explained that Becker, now 55, had “served his sentence” and was “not subject to any criminal restrictions in Germany”.
Becker will appear on Eurosport every day after the night sessions of the Australian Open which begins on January 16.
Source: AFP


















3, January 2023
Spain busts group that smuggled thousands of tonnes of electronic waste to Africa 0
Spanish police have broken up a criminal group that smuggled over 5,000 tonnes of hazardous electronic waste from Spain’s Canary Islands to several African countries, authorities said Tuesday.
Police arrested 43 people suspected of having illegally shipped 331 containers of used electronics to Africa over the past two years, the finance ministry said in a statement.
The network allegedly forged customs documents for the exported waste to make it seem that the containers held second-hand goods, in an operation valued at over 1.5 million euros.
Most of the trash was sent to Ghana, Mauritania, Nigeria and Senegal.
Africa has become a major dumping ground for discarded electronics from around the world, known as e-waste.
This is often burned to extract minerals such as aluminium and copper that can fetch a high value when resold.
Electronic devices and vehicle parts can contain cadmium, mercury, lead, arsenic and other substances that can harm the environment or human health when they are not properly handled.
Source: AFP