Entertainment
Sean Penn reveals unlikely bond with Bob Dylan in boxing ring
Bob Dylan appeared to be a major boxing fan, as Sean Penn shared he would show up at his home regularly to spar.
On the Monday, September 22, episode of The Tonight Show on Monday, Penn paid a visit to promote his new film One Battle After Another.
During the conversation at the late-night show, the 65-year-old actor spilled secret bond he and Bob Dylan had, sharing they were ring buddies and used to spar together — “more than once.”
“Bob Dylan, turns out, is a student of boxing, and I had a 16-foot punching ring at my house and I was friendly with his son,” Penn told Fallon of his spar with the rock icon.
“And at some point, Jesse, his son, said to me, ‘You know, my dad would like to spar.’ “
Penn further shared that Dylan then started coming over regularly.
“Sorry Bob, if I’m talking out of school,” he apologized to Dylan if he was oversharing about his personal life, noting he would show up every morning for about a month.
“That went on for about a month, I think. About seven or eight o’clock in the morning, with his hoodie on and about six bull mastiffs coming out of a VW van. There wasn’t a lot of conversation, it was kind of like ‘Good? Good.’ And we’d spar,” Penn added.
Entertainment
Bondi shooting families demand national probe into Australia’s ‘rise in antisemitism’
- Albanese backs NSW-led commission, resists federal probe.
- Minister warns national inquiry could amplify worst voices.
- Families call federal response not nearly enough.
SYDNEY: Families of victims killed in the Bondi Beach mass shooting called Monday for an independent national inquiry into antisemitism in Australia and alleged failures in policing, intelligence and policy, they say, enabled the attack.
Father and son Sajid and Naveed Akram are accused of targeting a Hanukkah event on Sydney’s Bondi Beach on December 14, killing 15 people and wounding dozens in what authorities have described as an antisemitic terrorist attack.
Seventeen families, in an open letter to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, urged him to “immediately establish a Commonwealth Royal Commission into the rapid rise of antisemitism in Australia” and examine “law enforcement, intelligence, and policy failures that led to the Bondi Beach massacre”.
“We demand answers and solutions,” the families wrote.
“We need to know why clear warning signs were ignored, how antisemitic hatred and extremism were allowed to dangerously grow unchecked, and what changes must be made to protect all Australians going forward.”
Albanese has resisted calls for a federal inquiry, citing a need for urgent action rather than waiting “years for answers”.
“We need to get on with any changes that are required,” he told reporters Monday.
“I have nothing except sympathy for those families. My job, as prime minister, is to look at how we build unity, how we build social cohesion, how we do what the nation needs at what is a very difficult time.”
Albanese said last week that a New South Wales-led royal commission — where the shooting occurred — would suffice and promised full support.
Canberra has flagged a suite of reforms to gun ownership and hate speech laws, as well as an inquiry into police and intelligence services.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke warned Monday that a national royal commission could give “some of the worst statements and worst voices” a platform to relive “the worst examples of antisemitism over the last two years”, which he said was not in the interest of unity or national security.
But the families of those killed at Bondi Beach said the federal government’s response is “not nearly enough”.
“We have lost parents, spouses, children, and grandparents. Our loved ones were celebrating Chanukah at Bondi Beach, a festival of light and joy, in an iconic public space that should have been safe,” the letter said.
“You owe us answers. You owe us accountability. And you owe Australians the truth.”
The families said the rise of antisemitism was a “national crisis”, adding the “threat was not going away”.
“We need strong action now. We need leadership now. You cannot bring back our loved ones. But with a well-led Commonwealth Royal Commission and strong action, you may be able to save many more.”
One of the gunmen, Sajid Akram, 50, was shot and killed by police during the attack. An Indian national, he entered Australia on a visa in 1998.
His 24-year-old son Naveed, an Australian-born citizen, remains in custody facing multiple charges, including terrorism and 15 murders, as well as committing a “terrorist act” and planting a bomb with intent to harm.
Entertainment
Nine killed, including five children, in deadly Suriname stabbing
- Four of victims reportedly stabber’s own children.
- A sixth child and an adult critically wounded, hospitalised.
- Officers shot, wounded suspect after he attacked police with knife.
A man stabbed to death nine people, including five children, overnight in Suriname’s capital Paramaribo, police said Sunday, adding the suspect was wounded and arrested.
The man appeared to be suffering from mental health issues, and four of his own children were among the fatalities in the attack, which took place in and around his home, according to local media reports.
The suspect had an argument with his wife over the phone before stabbing one of the victims, his 11-year-old daughter, 44 times in the kitchen of their home, local media reported.
“A man killed four adults and five children with a sharp object at a residence in Hadji Iding Soemitaweg,” the local police said in a statement. “A sixth child and an adult were seriously injured and were transported to the hospital, according to the statement.
Officers who arrived on the scene had to open fire on the suspect, as “he attacked police with a sharp object,“ the statement said.
The man sustained a gunshot wound to the leg and has been hospitalised under police supervision, police said without identifying him.
“Further details regarding the true circumstances of this tragic attack will follow,” the statement concluded.
According to the local press, which visited the scene of the attack and spoke to the man’s neighbours in Hadji Iding Soemitaweg, a neighbourhood in the Commewijne district, the suspect had mental health issues.
Suriname’s President Jennifer Geerlings-Simons stated in response to the killings on her Facebook page.
“At a time when family and friends should stand together and support one another, we are faced with the harsh reality that there is another side to the world,” she wrote.
“A father who takes the lives of his own children and, in the process, kills his neighbours as well. I wish all those in mourning much strength, courage, and comfort in this unimaginably difficult time.“
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