Will Tyrese Haliburton play in NBA Finals Game 6? Decision is complicated, experts sayNew Foto - Will Tyrese Haliburton play in NBA Finals Game 6? Decision is complicated, experts say

Tyrese Haliburton, even with a strained right calf thatraised questions about his availabilityfor Game 6 of the NBA Finals, has managed to keep the basketball world on its heels. "If I can walk, then I want to play," Haliburton said Mondayafter the calf injury he aggravated in Game 5 clearly affected himduring theIndiana Pacers' loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder, which left the Pacers trailing 3-2 in the best-of-7 series. The day before Game 6, set for Thursday, June 19, Haliburton said he is a competitor and wants to play yet also remarked: "I have to understand the risks, ask the right questions…" Cynics may think Haliburton is trying to keep the Thunder guessing (his coach said he "probably will be a game-time decision for Game 6"). But two orthopedic surgeons who have worked with NBA teams told USA TODAY Sports that decisions about whether to play with an injury are complex. "An ankle sprain can be two hours of conversation,'' said Brian Cole, head team physician for theChicago Bullssince 2005. "X-rays, X-rays, repeated MRIs. Talking to different levels of trainers, the family, the agent. "Especially at a time where you're dealing like this, where it matters more than ever.'' Why it matters: The Pacers are trying to win their first NBA championship in franchise history. It's hard to imagine them doing it without Haliburton, their All-Star point guard. But it's unlikely Haliburton will play without conferring with his agent, said Robert Anderson, a member of the NBA's committee studying ankle sprains and team orthopedist for the NFL'sGreen Bay Packers. Anderson said an MRI, which the Pacers said Haliburton had, usually will go to two consultants. Then the risks of playing with the injury are assessed, said Anderson, who said the player and agent then likely will discuss the risks involving the injury. "It also becomes a business decision,'' Anderson said. Willis Reed limped out of the locker room with a leg injury before Game 7 of the 1970 NBA Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers andNew York Knicks. Reed, then the Knicks' star center, gritted through the pain and helped the Knicks win the NBA championship. Fifty-five years later, the story epitomizes toughness. Fair or not, the "pain threshold" likely will become part of the conversation regarding whether or not Haliburton plays. "Athletes play in pain all the time,'' Cole said. "It's an issue of what they can tolerate and if their mechanics are compromised in any meaningful way.'' William McGarvey, an orthopedic surgeon who worked for theHouston Rockets, pointed out that pain depends on how a player functions. McGarvey also noted that Haliburton is a triple threat, with the Pacers star averaging 17.9 points, 9.1 assists and 5.8 rebounds during the playoffs. "If he's just bringing the ball up, distributing or in a position where he is just jumping up and down, trying to grab a rebound, it's a little more controlled,'' McGarvey told USA TODAY Sports. "But if he's jumping for a rebound, if he's going up for a layup or a dunk, he's got to push off. He could hurt himself on landing. He could hurt himself if he's going up against another player. These guys get in awkward positions and they have to be fairly agile to be able to land effectively and things like that. "The other issue here is how the injury is affecting him. Is it causing him to just have pain when he pushes off or is it because it's irritated? Is it causing him spasms so that even when he's sitting and resting, he's getting a crampy feeling in his leg?" Keith Jones, an athletic trainer who has worked for the Orlando Magic, Los Angeles Clippers and Houston Rockets, said of a muscle sprain: "Normally you'd do seven days of really not much, and then you reassess.'' No such luck for the Pacers, who had less than 72 hours after Game 5 to potentially get Haliburton ready for Game 6. Jones said he would prescribe hands-on therapy, be it massage or other manipulation of the muscle or muscle tissue. "But a lot of ice, a lot of rest,'' he said. "You could put someone in a boot just to take the strain off of it so ... they're walking on a boot instead of the heel-toe motion. Really isolate it and let it rest. Keep it elevated. Try to avoid inflammation, (there's) anti-inflammatory medications you can take. But the main thing is the body heals on its own. "You can't speed it up. You can do things to create a better environment for healing to take place. But it's going to heal when it's supposed to heal." Cole said the treatment options are limited. "If it's a calf strain, a true muscle strain, not a tendon, but muscle strain, they take a while to heal and there's no magic,'' he said. "You can't inject anything in there. You can't give any kind of medications. There's no special hyperbaric oxygen or anything that's going to cure this thing in that period of time. "So, it's just, is he a good healer? How bad is the strain? I haven't seen the MRI, so I don't know. … There's just not a lot of time to let a muscle injury recover if that's where it is." Haliburton said he expected treatment to be near-constant. "I think just around-the-clock stuff as much as I can," Haliburton said. "Massage, needles, hyperbaric, H waves. Everything you can do to get as comfortable as you can going into it. The right tape and stuff while I am performing. I'm sure there's a bunch of medical professionals who could give you a better answer. Just doing everything I'm told. Trying to do everything I can." The mention of Kevin Durant might create fear for Pacer fans, if not Haliburton. During the 2019 playoffs, Durant, then playing for the Golden State Warriors, missed nine games with a calf injury. He returned to action during Game 5 of the 2019 Finals, with the Warriors trailing the Toronto Raptors 3-1. Two minutes into the second quarter, Durant ruptured his Achilles tendon, which sidelined him for about 18 months. The three orthopedic surgeons who spoke to USA TODAY Sports said there is no evidence that a strained calf can lead to a ruptured Achilles tendon. "I would argue that playing with the strained calf just runs the risk of getting an escalation of symptoms related to the strained calf,'' Cole said. "But ... an Achilles tendon ruptures in a very different location. A strained calf injury is a little bit higher up. "So, I think that we would typically let a player play if they can tolerate the ability to play basketball, cut, pivot, change direction, and so forth. If they can tolerate all that, then we let them play.'' Anderson said Durant had preexisting issues with his Achilles tendon. He said an MRI would provide the Pacers clear evidence of whether the injury stems from the Achilles tendon or muscles above the tendon associated with calf strains. "So when you have a calf strain, if it's in the muscle, there's absolutely no increased risk of Achilles tendon rupture,'' Anderson said. While talking about Haliburton, McGarvey said was he reminded of Michael Jordan playing with the flu during Game 5 of the 1997 Finals. Jordan scored 38 points and led the Chicago Bulls to a victory over the Utah Jazz. "If you know your injury isn't going to be a career threatening thing, then it's really up to the individual as to how much they can tolerate and how much they want to go out there,'' McGarvey said. "And leaders tend to get out and deal with it.'' This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tyrese Haliburton injury presents complex NBA Finals Game 6 decision

Will Tyrese Haliburton play in NBA Finals Game 6? Decision is complicated, experts say

Will Tyrese Haliburton play in NBA Finals Game 6? Decision is complicated, experts say Tyrese Haliburton, even with a strained right calf th...
Colorado Rockies dig in against MLB's worst season ever: 'Go straight through it'New Foto - Colorado Rockies dig in against MLB's worst season ever: 'Go straight through it'

WASHINGTON – There are no silver linings to nine wins and 50 losses. When you're set to obliterate the record for most losses in a major league season – a record not even a year old – there's nowhere to hide. When your manager gets fired, and the industry is mocking your organization, and there are no reinforcements coming to save you, 9-50 feels like a permanent condition. Yet when you are theColorado Rockies, andMajor League Baseballdictates that you play 162 games, there is no choice but to continue showing up, if only to prove that 9-50 will not define you, and that whatever number the game assigns you at year's end will not go in the game's permanent records. "I mean, that's life. Life's gonna hit you in the face a lot," muses Warren Schaeffer, the Rockies' 40-year-old interim manager elevated from third base coach and organizational lifer to replace thefired Bud Blackon May 11, when the club was 7-33. "You got to keep waking up and getting after it and really, there's no way around it. You got to go straight through it." Yes, the Rockies are going through it. MLB POWER RANKINGS:Can Red Sox continue climb after Devers trade? It's not yet summer, and the Rockies have already endured four eight-game losing streaks. The last of those skids dropped them to 9-50, which would be a 25-137 pace, which would make the 2024Chicago White Sox'srecord-setting 121 losses a year agolook like prosperity. Yet, something happened after the Rockies took their expected sweep to the Mets in New York. They moved on to Miami and beat the Marlins to reach double-digit wins – on June 2. Then, they beat the Marlins two more times, finished off the sweep and snapped their major league record streak of not winning a series at 22, 9-50 suddenly becoming 12-50. At this point in the movie, you expect the music to swell and the montage to kick in, visions of decisive home runs and high fives dominating the screen. This is not that movie. These are the 2025 Rockies, and they lost seven of their next eight games. Once again, though, a mini-stand followed, as they avoided a sweep in Atlanta and took the first three of four games at Washington, scoring 10 runs twice in three games. No, an 8-7 stretch in a year of almost runaway futility - Colorado is now 17-57 - isn't necessarily a harbinger of anything. Yet for the Rockies, a mélange of promising but unpolished young players, third-chance veterans and platoon or bench players pressed into greater duty, it feels like progress. "You don't really have a choice. In life, not just baseball, you get tossed in some tough situations," says Rockies outfielder Mickey Moniak, a former No. 1 overall pick now hoping to stick in his third organization. "The season hasn't gone the way we wanted to. But we play 162 games. If the first 60 or so weren't how we wanted, we have a group in this clubhouse and a group of coaches who aren't going to fold, and we're gonna learn. "We're gonna grow." Funny thing about squads flirting with historic futility: The players bear almost all the public shame yet have only so much to do with the outcome. These Rockies are a poorly put together team, ranking 30thin defensive runs saved (-41) and in the red in almost every key defensive metric. Three semi-regulars – Moniak, infielder Orlando Arcia and utilityman Tyler Freeman – were acquired between March 22 and May 28, reflecting the ad hoc nature of Rockies roster-building. Amid the rubble of the early season, a star seemed to emerge. Hunter Goodman, a fourth-round pick in 2021, leads major league catchers with 77 hits and NL catchers with 14 home runs, 11 of them away from Coors Field. He would be more than a perfunctory All-Star to ensure the Rockies are represented. He's proven so valuable to Colorado that Schaeffer has to closely monitor his usage, as Goodman has already caught more games – 47 – than he has in any pro season. Goodman toggled between first, catcher and corner outfield in his first three pro seasons and appreciates being able to settle behind the dish. This season will be remembered as the one Goodman not only stuck in Denver but became a fixture. Moniak saw it coming this spring when, before the Los Angeles Angels released him, when he watched from the opposing dugout while Goodman launched moonshots in the desert. "Goody's put together a helluva season," says Moniak. "And I think the world is seeing that." Goodman was on the Albuquerque-Coors Field shuttle the past two seasons and has seen plenty of players come and go. He believes he'll have permanent company soon. "Seeing young guys come up, there's going to be struggles, but watching guys learn and learn as we go through it and try to figure things out together and try and lean on each other has been really good," says Goodman. "Once you learn that every day is a new day, once you can figure out that routine of getting over the last game, and moving on to the next day, that helps a lot." It is perhaps the key to both team and individual survival. Michael Toglia, the 6-5, 225-pound first baseman, debuted in 2022 and mashed 25 home runs in 116 games last season, stoking expectations. Yet he struck out a stunning 81 times in his first 54 games, a 39% strikeout rate. On May 31, with the Rockies at 9-49, the 26-year-old was optioned to Class AAA. He missed the Rockies' brief hot streak but was recalled June 16 – and now has three home runs in their past two games, both victories. So, what changed when the Rockies played .153 ball through 59 games, and .533 ball in the past 15? "I think before this month, there was a lot of hopeful baseball - kind of hoping things would go our way, playing not to lose," says Toglia, 26. "Now I feel like everybody has the confidence that we can be a winning team here." Moniak agrees. "We could've let the start of the season weigh on us and bring us down. I don't think we've done that," he says. "I think we've grown as a team. I think we're starting to show up to the field and expect to win the game instead of try not to lose." Chase Dollander admits he was emotional on April 6, when he made his major league debut in front of his family, his girlfriend and other supporting figures, less than two years after he was drafted ninth overall out of Tennessee. On the other hand, it is nothing he never expected. That's the mentality of a pitcher who anticipates stardom, or at least a very long major league career. It is what the Rockies would like him to become – a rare Coors Field pitching success. Dollander certainly has seen it already. "I've been prepared for everything," says Dollander. "I've envisioned everything. I do a lot of visualization stuff - envisioning not just the good but also the bad and how I'm going to prepare for that. "You're going to face adversity at some point in time and this year, I've faced a good bit of it. Things don't fall your way and you just have to keep on going, keep on working and eventually it will start to land." Making your major league debut amid a season where your team lost 50 of its first 59 is, shall we say, suboptimal. And Dollander's results have been uneven: He's pitched to a 6.57 ERA and 1.54 WHIP in 11 starts, failing to reach the fourth inning in three of them. Yet he does not shirk from what is expected, which is to succeed where myriad prospects and free agents have failed: Be an ace at Coors Field. "You're going to give up more homers," he says. " You're going to give up more bloop hits. The hits that really make you mad are the ones that are less than 80 mph and they fall for a hit. The field's so big, that's just going to happen. "And then on top of that, your stuff's not going to move as much. So it's how can you limit damage when those things happen. "Because inevitably, that's going to happen." Dollander says this not in a woe-is-me tone but rather with a heavy dose of pragmatism, knowing that his goal is not necessarily to win ERA titles. Rather, it's to simply give the Rockies a rotation rock, whatever form that takes. "No matter what the team's record is, no matter what my record is or my stats are, staying in the moment is the big thing," says Dollander.  "When I put my best version of myself on the mound, I'm giving my team all I have. And I hope they know that. "Every time I go out there, for me, it's a war. It's either life or death. And I go out there with that mentality. I'm putting it all on the line." With a six-pitch mix that includes a fastball and sinker that both clock in at 96.5 mph, he may be well-suited to do just that at Coors. "Every start he gets a little better and starts to figure things out a little more," says Goodman. "Over the course of this year into next year, it's going to be huge for him to keep getting his feet wet and learning." Moniak says the Rockies would be "doing ourselves a disservice" if they failed to grasp lessons forged in the misery of perpetual losing. This season will certainly be one to grow on, even if their stiffest competition may come from ghosts. The Rockies entered the week tied with the 1932 Red Sox for the worst start through 72 games. They've since moved past them and heck, if they split the next 10 games, their winning percentage will climb over the '24 White Sox. Avoiding ignominy is in their grasp. But the Rockies want something more from this lost season that's somehow not as dark as it once was. "It's a great opportunity," says Schaefer, "for young guys and veterans alike to feel that it is not a good feeling to lose, and it's not acceptable to lose over the long haul, and that we want to be better than that. "I mean, everybody's in this together, you know, it's not young and old, it's. It's the Rockies." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Colorado Rockies make a stand to avoid MLB's worst record ever

Colorado Rockies dig in against MLB's worst season ever: 'Go straight through it'

Colorado Rockies dig in against MLB's worst season ever: 'Go straight through it' WASHINGTON – There are no silver linings to ni...
Zelenskyy calls for more pressure on Russia after deadly Kyiv missile strikeNew Foto - Zelenskyy calls for more pressure on Russia after deadly Kyiv missile strike

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Thursday said a Russianmissile strike on a nine-story Kyiv apartment buildingwas a sign that more pressure must be applied on Moscow to agree to a ceasefire, as Moscow intensifies attacks in the three-year war. The drone and missile attack on Kyiv early on Tuesday, the deadliest assault on the capital this year, killed 28 people across the city and injured 142 more, Kyiv Military Administration head Tymur Tkachenko said on Thursday. Zelenskyy, along with the head of the presidential office Andrii Yermak and Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko, visited the site of the apartment building in Kyiv's Solomianskyi district Thursday morning, laying flowers and paying tribute to the 23 people who died there after a direct hit by a missile collapsed the structure. "This attack is a reminder to the world that Russia rejects a ceasefire and chooses killing," Zelenskyy wrote on Telegram, and thanked Ukraine's partners who he said are ready to pressure Russia to "feel the real cost of the war." Tuesday's attack on Kyiv was part of a sweeping barrage as Russia once again sought to overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses. Russia fired more than 440 drones and 32 missiles in what Zelenskyy called one of the biggest bombardments ofthe war, now in its fourth year. As Russia proceeds witha summer offensiveon parts of the roughly 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line,U.S.-led peace effortshave failed to gain traction. Russian President Vladimir Putin has effectively rejected an offer from U.S.President Donald Trumpfor an immediate 30-day ceasefire, making it conditional on a halt on Ukraine's mobilization effort and a freeze on Western arms supplies. Meanwhile,Middle East tensionsand U.S.trade tariffshave drawn world attention away from Ukraine's pleas for more diplomatic and economic pressure to be placed on Moscow. Russia in recent weeks hasintensified long-range attacksthat have struck urban residential areas. Yet on Wednesday, Putin denied that his military had struck such targets, saying that attacks were "against military industries, not residential quarters." Speaking to senior news leadersof international news agencies in St. Petersburg, Putin said he was open to talks with Zelenskyy, but repeated his claim that the Ukrainian leader had lost his legitimacy after his term expired last year — allegations rejected by Kyiv and its allies. "We are ready for substantive talks on the principles of a settlement," Putin said, noting that a previous round of talks in Istanbul had led toan exchange of prisonersand the bodies of fallen soldiers. Putin on Wednesday praised Trump's push for peace in Ukraine. But Ukraine's Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha wrote on X on Thursday that it was his country that had "unconditionally accepted" the U.S. proposal for a ceasefire, and said that Russian claims of willingness to end the war were "manipulations." "It has been exactly 100 days since Ukraine unconditionally accepted the U.S. peace proposal to completely cease fire, put an end to the killing, and move forward with a genuine peace process ... 100 days of Russia escalating terror against Ukraine rather than ending it," Sybiha wrote. "Ukraine remains committed to peace. Unfortunately, Russia continues to choose war, disregarding U.S. efforts to end the killing," he added. Overnight on Wednesday, Russia fired a barrage of 104 Shahed and decoy drones across Ukraine, according to the country's air force. Of those, 88 were intercepted, jammed, or lost from radars mid-flight. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage caused by the attack. ___ Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Zelenskyy calls for more pressure on Russia after deadly Kyiv missile strike

Zelenskyy calls for more pressure on Russia after deadly Kyiv missile strike KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on...
UK's central bank set to keep interest rates on hold amid Middle East uncertaintiesNew Foto - UK's central bank set to keep interest rates on hold amid Middle East uncertainties

LONDON (AP) — The Bank of England is set to keep interest rates on hold Thursday as fears grow that the conflict between Israel and Iran will escalate to involve the United States and send oil prices soaring and push U.K. inflation further above target. The bank's nine-member Monetary Policy Committee is widely expected to hold its main interest rate at the two-year low of 4.25% as they await to see how theconflict in the Middle Eastpans out over coming days. WithU.K. inflation at 3.4%above the bank's target rate of 2%, policymakers are likely to be mindful of the impact on oil prices, which have risen sharply in recent days to over $75 a barrel. The prevailing view at the bank was that inflation would remain elevated over the coming months but start to head back towards next year. The uptick in oil prices has the potential to scupper that expectation. "The risk to energy prices has clearly intensified and moved up the agenda given developments in the Middle East," said Sandra Horsfield, an economist for Investec. Uncertainty over the level oftariffsU.S.President Donald Trumpwill impose around the world is also clouding the outlook for prices around the world. Though the U.K. looks like it will bespared a raft of tariffs, the backdrop for the global economy remains highly uncertain. That tariff concern is at the forefront of concerns at the U.S. Federal Reserve, which on Wednesday kept itskey rate unchanged, to the chagrin of Trump, who has been urging the central bank to join others, such as the Bank of England and European Central Bank, and cut borrowing costs. Since its first quarter-point rate cut last August from the 16-year high of 5.25%, the Bank of England has played it steady, reducing interest rates every three months. That would mean the next reduction is in August.

UK's central bank set to keep interest rates on hold amid Middle East uncertainties

UK's central bank set to keep interest rates on hold amid Middle East uncertainties LONDON (AP) — The Bank of England is set to keep int...
Altuve, Caratini, Dubón homer, Astros have 20 hits in 11-4 win over AthleticsNew Foto - Altuve, Caratini, Dubón homer, Astros have 20 hits in 11-4 win over Athletics

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Jose Altuve and Victor Caratini hit three-run home runs in a seven-run sixth inning and the Houston Astros had a season-high 20 hits in an 11-4 victory over the Athletics on Wednesday night. Framber Valdez (8-4) limited the A's to two runs and five hits in six innings to help the Astros win for the seventh time in eight games. Altuve, Caratini. Jeremy Peña. Cam Smith and Jake Meyers had three hits apiece, and Yandy Diaz and Mauricio Dubón each added two. Nick Kurtz hit a double and scored on a single by Austin Wynns to give the Athletics a 1-0 lead in the second. The 22-year-old rookie had a solo homer in the ninth. Dubón hit a leadoff homer in the third inning and Peña's RBI single off starter Luis Severino (2-7) in the fourth made it 2-1. The Athletics had a four-game win streak snapped Tuesday with a13-3 loss to Houston. Key moment Tyler Ferguson replaced Severino to start the sixth and gave up a single to Meyers before Dubón grounded into a 4-6-3 double play but Peña followed with a single, Isaac Paredes followed with a walk and Altuve's three-run shot sparked Houston's seven-run sixth that made it 9-1. Key stat The Athletics gave up three home runs and have yielded a major league-leading 113 this season, sixth most before the All-Star break in franchise history. The A's are on pace to allow 247 homers this season and shatter the franchise record of 220 set by the 1964 Kansas City A's. Up next Houston's Colton Gordon (2-1, 4.70 ERA) was scheduled to pitch Thursday against Jacob Lopez (1-4, 4.80) to wrap up the four-game series. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Altuve, Caratini, Dubón homer, Astros have 20 hits in 11-4 win over Athletics

Altuve, Caratini, Dubón homer, Astros have 20 hits in 11-4 win over Athletics WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Jose Altuve and Victor Caratini...
Sri Lanka's Nissanka leads composed response to Bangladesh's 495 in 1st cricket testNew Foto - Sri Lanka's Nissanka leads composed response to Bangladesh's 495 in 1st cricket test

GALLE, Sri Lanka (AP) — Sri Lanka reached 100 for one at lunch on Day 3 of the first cricket test in a composed response toBangladesh's first-innings total of 495. Pathum Nissanka led the charge with a display of silken stroke play, peppering the off-side with a series of elegant drives. There was a moment of drama when, on 36, he offered a chance but Mominul Haque dropped a sharp attempted catch at short leg off Nayeem Hasan's first over. At the interval, Nissanka remained unbeaten on 46 and was joined by Dinesh Chandimal, who was unbeaten on 22 and anchoring the innings with his usual composure. The only Sri Lanka wicket to fall in Thursday's morning session was Lahiru Udara for 29. The 31-year-old righthander had shown early promise but fell to a soft dismissal — a leading edge ballooning back to left-arm spinner Taijul Islam. It was a tame end to what had promised to be a bright beginning in the test format. Bangladesh's seamers, in particular Nahid Rana, bowled strongly. The 22-year-old paceman beat the bat repeatedly without reward in a spell that contained good pace, discipline and a bit of zip off the surface. Earlier in the morning session, it took Sri Lanka just 16 deliveries to finish off the Bangladesh innings. From a position of strength at 458 for four late on Day 2, the tourists unravelled and eventually lost their last six wickets for 37 runs. Asitha Fernando, bustling in with purpose and precision, was the spearhead of the Sri Lanka revival, claiming four wickets with admirable rhythm. He was ably supported by Milan Rathnayake, whose pace and clever variations earned him three wickets. On debut, Tharindu Rathnayake, bowling with composure that belied his inexperience, chipped in with three crucial wickets. For the better part of two days, it was almost one-way with Mushfiqur Rahim playing with poise in compiling a masterful 163 — an innings built on judgment, timing and grit. His 264-run partnership with Najmul Hossain Shanto, who posted 148, was the cornerstone of Bangladesh's early dominance. ___ AP cricket:https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

Sri Lanka's Nissanka leads composed response to Bangladesh's 495 in 1st cricket test

Sri Lanka's Nissanka leads composed response to Bangladesh's 495 in 1st cricket test GALLE, Sri Lanka (AP) — Sri Lanka reached 100 f...
Thai prime minister's leaked phone call with Cambodia's Hun Sen sets off political backlashNew Foto - Thai prime minister's leaked phone call with Cambodia's Hun Sen sets off political backlash

BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand's Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra apologized Thursday for the deepening political turbulence set off by a leaked recording of her negotiations with Cambodia's former leader in the two nations'latest border dispute. Calls for her resignation grew after a major coalition partner pulled out and further destabilizedthe already rocky governmentled by her Pheu Thai Party. Paetongtarn has already been criticized for a perceived soft stance toward Cambodia, especially by right-wing nationalists who are longtime foes of her father, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The latest border dispute involved an armed confrontation May 28 in a relatively small "no man's land" both countries claim in which one Cambodian soldier was killed. Cambodia's Senate President Hun Sen posted the full, 17-minute phone call on his Facebook page after a shorter version was leaked Wednesday. He said he recorded the conversation "to avoid any misunderstanding or misrepresentation in official matters," adding that he shared the recording with at least 80 people. In the recording, Paetongtarn was heard calling Hun Sen "uncle" as they discussed through translators whether they should lift border restrictions imposed after the deadly clash. Backlash revolved around her calling a Thai army commander in charge of the border area where the clash happened as "an opponent." Critics said she was trying to please Hun Sen too much and made Thailand look weak. Paetongtarn said her comments were a negotiation tactic and that her goal was to bring peace between the countries. However, she said she would no longer engage in a private talk with Hun Sen as she could not trust him. "It's now clear that all that he cares about is his popularity in the country, without considering impacts on relations with other countries," she said. Thailand's Foreign Affairs Ministry said it submitted a protest letter over the leaked recording with the Cambodian ambassador, saying that Cambodia's actions were unacceptable and "contradicted internationally accepted practices and the spirit of good neighborliness. " Paetongtarn has described the two families as having close, longtime relationships. Her fatherThaksin and Hun Senreportedly regard each other as "godbrothers." In 2009, Hun Sen appointed Thaksin as a Cambodian government adviser, but Thaksin soon resigned the position. Hours after the leak, the Bhumjaithai party, the biggest partner in Paetongtarn's ruling coalition, said it would leave the coalition because of the leaked phone call. The party's statement said the recording "posed an impact on Thailand's sovereignty, territory, interests and the army." The party called for Paetongtarn to take responsibility for the damage, although they did not say how. There has already been a rift between Bhumjaithai and Pheu Thai over reports that the former would be shuffled out of the powerful Interior Ministry. Several Bhumjaithai leaders are also under investigation over the alleged rigging ofthe Senate electionin which many figures who are reportedly close to the party claimed a majority of seats. The departure of Bhumjaithai left the 10-party coalition with 255 seats, just above the majority of the 500-seat house. Opposition leader Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut ofthe People's Partyon Thursday called for Paetongtarn to dissolve Parliament and hold a new election. He said the leaked phone call was "the last straw" that destroyed people's faith in her administration. Dozens of nationalists protesters gathered near the Government House on Thursday, holding Thai national flags and signs calling for Paetongtarn to resign. Some senators said they will file a motion to impeach her, and several other individuals also filed complaints over the matter to law enforcement agencies. People have also expressed concern that Paetongtarn's comment towards the local army commander could potentially lead to a military coup. Her father Thaksin, was ousted in a coup in 2006, and Thaksin's sister, Yingluck Shinawatra, became prime minister in 2011 and was ousted by a military coup in 2014. The army said in a statement Thursday that it would like the people to "maintain confidence in the Royal Thai Army's steadfast commitment to constitutional monarchy and its readiness to execute its constitutional mandate of protecting national sovereignty through established legal frameworks and institutional mechanisms."

Thai prime minister's leaked phone call with Cambodia's Hun Sen sets off political backlash

Thai prime minister's leaked phone call with Cambodia's Hun Sen sets off political backlash BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand's Prime Mini...

 

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