Showing posts with label Mitchell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mitchell. Show all posts

Monday, July 18, 2011

Mitchell beats Murray in thriller

By Nabil Hassan
BBC SPORT Kevin Mitchell (l) and John Murray Mitchell (l) inflicted the only career defeat on Murray on Saturday Kevin Mitchell claimed the vacant WBO inter-continental lightweight title with a superb victory over the previously unbeaten John Murray.

Manchester's Murray seemed to shading the fight in the opening five rounds but a change in tactics swung the contest Mitchell's way.

Mitchell rocked Murray with a left in the seventh but the bell saved him.

But the 26-year-old finished the job a round later, flooring Murray before the fight was eventually stopped.

It was a sensational victory for the Dagenham fighter, who had been out of the ring for over a year following his third-round defeat to Michael Katsidis - his only career loss.

Mitchell admitted following that defeat that he had then lost his way, but this victory is proof that he is now back on track.

He made the better start to the fight and was the more accurate of the two fighters with his punches. In particular his left-hand uppercut had more snap than Murray's.

Mitchell again made a strong start to the second and looked in control of the round until a fierce right-hook from Murray rocked the challenger. It spurred Murray on and a further barrage on his opponent shaded the round in his favour.

Mitchell - sensing he was being dragged into a toe-to-toe brawl - started to move around the ring and box behind the jab, but Manchester's Murray eventually closed off the ring and caught up with him, catching his opponent with several fierce shots.

Murray, 26, continued to be the aggressor in the fourth round, landing more punches than his opponent but it was Mitchell who was landing the quality shots in what was becoming a fascinating contest.

The pace and volume of punches was starting to take its toll on Mitchell in the fifth as the fight started to swing firmly in Murray's favour. It was the best round of the fight for the Manchester man who seemed unconcerned by Mitchell's punches and whose pace was relentless throughout.

But Mitchell looked to have cleared his head in the sixth, with Murray reduced to short bursts, and he finally started to show his boxing ability and reverted to the 'box and run' game plan that served him so well against Breidis Prescott in 2009.

The Dagenham fighter continued to grow in confidence, throwing several accurate combinations in the seventh and a huge right hand, left-uppercut combination by Mitchell late in the round rocked Murray to the core and only the bell saved him from being knocked out.

Mitchell went after his man at the start of the eighth and despite a fierce left from the Manchester fighter a huge left sent Murray to the canvas.

Murray, who was shaky as he rose to his feet, was lucky to be able to continue but seconds later the fight was over as Mitchell sent in another combination that saw the contest stopped by the referee.

Earlier, Ricky Burns with a first-round victory against Nicky Cook who appeared to injure his back in trying to avoid a punch while Tony Bellew added the vacant British light-heavyweight title to his Commonwealth belt.

Bellew could be in line for a fight against WBO champion Nathan Cleverly having had to pull out of one contest against the Welshman after failing to make the weight having been brought in as a late replacement.


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Sunday, July 17, 2011

Mitchell urges Africa aid action

16 July 2011 Last updated at 13:05 GMT Andrew Mitchell: "Britain is putting its shoulder to the wheel... to stop this becoming a catastrophe"

International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell has urged the global community to help people in drought-hit east Africa to avoid a "catastrophe".

It comes as the UK pledged ?52.25m in emergency aid to help millions of people affected by the disaster.

Mr Mitchell, who is visiting Kenya, said the money would be used there, as well as in Somalia and Ethiopia.

The World Food Programme estimates 10 million people are affected by the worst drought in over half a century.

And the United Nation's Children's Fund believes about two million young people are malnourished.

The international development secretary said the situation was "getting worse" and urged the international community to do more.

Continue reading the main story Martin Plaut Africa analyst, BBC News

Providing aid inside Somalia is now a major priority. The UN's refugee agency estimates that nearly one-and-a-half million Somalis have been forced from their homes and are internally displaced by the drought.

Until very recently, helping them had been very difficult indeed. The Islamic militants of al-Shabaab, who control most of the south and the centre of the country, have only recently lifted their ban on outside aid agencies operating in their areas.

Children's fund Unicef has airlifted food to Baidoa, north-west of the capital, for the first time in years. The Red Cross is opening 10 new feeding centres in the Afgoye corridor, near the capital. And medical charity MSF is providing nutrition to children at a spontaneously formed camp of about 5,000 people at Jilib, on the Juba river.

It shows that aid can now get through to areas controlled by Islamists that were, until very recently, out of bounds to the aid agencies.

Mr Mitchell is currently visiting the Dadaab camp in Kenya, which is overflowing with tens of thousands of refugees fleeing the parched landscape in the region where Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya meet.

He estimates that there are about 400,000 people in the camp.

He said: "We need everyone who can help from across the world now to make sure they focus on this developing crisis here to stop it becoming a catastrophe. There is an emergency developing of profound proportions.

"Britain, as always, has shown huge generosity and is in a leadership position to try and resolve this crisis. We need others to do so too. We need the whole of the international community now to bend every sinew to help these poor people here who are in a desperate condition."

Mr Mitchell said the situation is particularly devastating in Somalia, where families already have to cope with living in one of the most insecure countries in the world.

"More than 3,000 people every day are fleeing over the borders to Ethiopia and Kenya, many of them arriving with starving children," he said.

"The international community must do more to help not only refugees but also those victims of the drought who remain in Somalia."

Map of drought in the Horn of Africa

Mr Mitchell also paid tribute to British charities and the public who had donated, saying they had "put their shoulder to the wheel" to try to help the victims.

These sentiments were echoed by Oxfam, which welcomed the government's additional funds and urged other rich countries to be equally generous.

It said: "There is at least a $700m (?434m) black hole in the aid effort which needs to be filled to save lives and avoid a humanitarian crisis becoming a full blown disaster."

The UK's ?52.25m aid package comes after a joint charity appeal by the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) saw more than ?13m raised in a week.

The cash is in addition to the ?38m food aid package announced on 3 July to feed 1.3m people for three months.

The Department for International Development (DFID) said the money would help:

500,000 people in Somalia, including treatment for nearly 70,000 acutely malnourished childrenMore than 130,000 people in the Dadaab camps to help provide them with clean drinking water and health care100,000 people in Dolo Ado refugee camps in Ethiopia to provide them with shelter and clean drinking water as well as targeted treatment of starving children300,000 Kenyans, including special rations to prevent malnutrition in children under the age of five and breastfeeding mothers.

A spokesman for the United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, Ron Redmond told the BBC the Dadaab camp is holding four times the number of people it was designed for and is unable to cope with the volume of people arriving each day.

"We have so many people arriving, in fact about 1,500 a day, that we now have 60,000 people living on the outskirts of the camp... because there is simply no more room inside."

A market in Ethiopia The money will help drought-hit areas of Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya

During his visit to Kenya, Mr Mitchell is meeting the head of the DEC, Brendan Gormley, and Justin Forsyth, chief executive of Save the Children.

Mr Gormley said the need to "scale up" the response to the disaster was urgent, adding that he was pleased that the government had announced more funding.

He said: "Combined with the extraordinary generosity of the UK public to the DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal, we can truly say that the UK is playing a leading role in responding to this disaster.

"There is still, however, a great deal more to be done before we can say we have safeguarded the lives of the 10 million people at risk."


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