France's ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy at an appeals trial Tuesday said he was "innocent", rejecting charges he had sought Libyan financing for his 2007 election in exchange for helping improve Tripoli's image after deadly bombings.
A lower court in September found the right-wing politician, who was president from 2007 to 2012, guilty of seeking to acquire funding from Muammar Gaddafi's Libya for the campaign that saw him elected and sentenced him to five years behind bars.
The case saw Sarkozy, who has always denied any wrongdoing, become modern France's first president to have gone to jail. He served 20 days before he was released pending the appeal.Â
In the initial trial, prosecutors had argued Sarkozy's aides, acting in his name, struck a deal with Gaddafi, promising in return to help restore the Libyan leader's international image after Tripoli was blamed for two airplane bombings.
The West laid the blame on Libya for the bombing of the Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988 over Lockerbie in Scotland -- which killed 259 people -- and of the UTA Flight 772 over Niger the following year, which took the lives of 170 people.
Relatives of those killed in the 1989 spoke of their ordeal at the appeal trial last week.
"You can only respond to such indescribable suffering with truth," Sarkozy said on the first of several days of taking the stand, with his wife, model and singer Carla Bruni, in the courtroom.
"But you cannot repair suffering with an injustice: I am innocent," he said.
The lower court found Sarkozy guilty of criminal conspiracy over what it said was a scheme to acquire Libyan funding, but not of receiving or using the funds for the campaign.
The appeal trial is set to run until June 3, with a verdict expected in the fall. If convicted, Sarkozy faces up to 10 years in prison.
Sarkozy has faced a series of legal issues since leaving office and has already received two definitive convictions in other cases.
Putting on a green jacket has lifted an incredible weight off the shoulders of Rory McIlroy as the relaxed reigning Masters champion strolls around Augusta National.
Russia and China vetoed a UN Security Council resolution Tuesday on reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a text already diluted to remove Gulf states' desired green light to use force to protect the key shipping lane.
Indigenous protesters from across Brazil marched to the capital Brasilia Tuesday to demand the government expedite recognition of their ancestral lands.
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Relaxed McIlroy finds new challenges after Masters win
Jim SLATER AFP
Putting on a green jacket has lifted an incredible weight off the shoulders of Rory McIlroy as the relaxed reigning Masters champion strolls around Augusta National.
The 36-year-old from Northern Ireland completed a career Grand Slam by capturing the green jacket last year to end a 10-year major win drought and years of chasing a Masters crown.
"It's so nice to walk around property or be out on the golf course and just not have that hanging over me," McIlroy said Tuesday. "It feels that it's a big weight off my shoulders."
World number two McIlroy tries to join Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus and Nick Faldo as the only back-to-back winners of the Masters with a victory this week.
Turns out the end of his slam quest with a fifth career major title was only the beginning of a new story for McIlroy.
"I think the story as it relates to me is what do I do from now onwards? What motivates me? What gets me going? What do I still want to achieve in the game?" McIlroy said.
"There's still a lot that I want to do. You think every time you achieve something or have success that you'll be happy, but then the goalposts move, and they just keep nudging a little bit further and further out of reach.
"I think what I've realized is, if you can just really find enjoyment in the journey, that's the big thing because honestly I felt like the career Grand Slam was my destination, and I got there, and then I realized it wasn't the destination."
Of all the majors, McIlroy says his best chances to win more titles will come at Augusta National.
"I feel like I'm still young, but I'm very experienced. I've been doing this for a long time. This is my 18th start," McIlroy said.
"I do feel like I've got another hopefully 10 good shots at this. Not that I don't at the other majors, but I just think that everything here is a little more predictable.
"I just think the more experience you have around this golf course, the better it is."
This year, however, McIlroy has a new outlook. It's what helped him arrive on Saturday instead of Monday and relish in the perks of being a Masters winner.
"For the past 17 years I just could not wait for the tournament to start," McIlroy said. "And this year I wouldn't care if the tournament never started. That's sort of the difference."
- No less motivated -
Knowing he will have the chance to return as often as he likes has not dimmed motivation, McIlroy said, even with the pressure of winning the slam released.
"It's completely different. I feel so much more relaxed. I know I'm going to be coming back here for a lot of years, going to enjoy the perks that the champions get here," he said.
"It doesn't make me any less motivated to go out there and play well and try to win the tournament, just more relaxed about it all."
McIlroy is already pondering the places at Augusta National where he can attack the course better.
"You're always going to have to pick and choose your spots around here, where to be aggressive and where not to, but I definitely think there's places where I could be more aggressive off the tee," McIlroy said.
"There's a few tee shots out here where I'll just try to be a bit more aggressive, and then if you do hit a good tee shot, you turn a potentially tough hole into a birdie hole."
js/rcw
Russia, China veto UN resolution on reopening Strait of Hormuz
AFP AFP
Russia and China vetoed a UN Security Council resolution Tuesday on reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a text already diluted to remove Gulf states' desired green light to use force to protect the key shipping lane.
The draft resolution prepared by Bahrain and supported by the United States received 11 votes in favor, two against and two abstentions. Bahrain's Foreign Minister Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani said Gulf states "regret" the outcome.
Iran has imposed an effective blockade on the critical waterway since the United States and Israel launched the war on February 28, sending ripple effects throughout the global economy.
The vote came hours before US President Donald Trump's dire ultimatum expires for Tehran to open the strait, which normally carries a fifth of the world's oil, or "a whole civilization will die" in Iran.
"Today's result does not restrict the United States to continue to act in its own self defense and in the collective defense of our allies and partners," US ambassador Mike Waltz said after the Security Council vote.
Al Zayani, speaking on behalf of the oil-exporting Gulf countries, said the failure to pass the resolution "sends the wrong signal to the world."
"This signal that the threat to international waterways can pass without any decisive action by the international organization responsible for the maintenance of international peace and security," he said.
Iran's UN ambassador said the text was designed "to punish the victim for defending its sovereignty and vital national interest in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz."
"Had this draft been adopted, it could have opened the door to dangerously broad and abusive interpretation that could be used to justify further use of force and unlawful actions in clear violation of the UN Charter," said Amir Saeid Iravani.
- 'Cease all attacks' -
Bahrain launched negotiations two weeks ago on a draft that would have given a clear UN mandate to any state wishing to use force to unblock the strait.
But objections from several veto-holding permanent members -- including France, Russia and China -- forced the text to be watered down and the vote delayed multiple times.
French opposition appeared to be lifted by the addition of wording that meant any action would need to be "defensive."
After further amendments, the latest version of the text seen by AFP no longer mentioned authorization to use force, even defensively.
The latest draft "strongly encourages states...to coordinate efforts, defensive in nature, commensurate to the circumstances, to contribute to ensuring the safety and security of navigation, including through the escort of merchant and commercial vessels," rather than explicitly authorizing force.
It also "demands" Iran "immediately cease all attacks against merchant and commercial vessels and any attempt to impede transit passage or freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz."
Additionally, it calls for the end to attacks on civilian water, oil, and gas infrastructure.
Justifying his veto, Russian ambassador Vassili Nebenzia said "nearly each paragraph of the draft that they proposed abounded with unbalanced, inaccurate and confrontational elements."
He said he understood concerns about transit in the Strait of Hormuz, and that Russia and China would propose an alternative draft resolution, without giving a date.Â
UN Security Council mandates authorizing member states to use force are rare.
During the 1990 Gulf War, a vote allowed a US-led coalition to intervene in Iraq after it invaded Kuwait.
In 2011, NATO obtained the green light to intervene in Libya when Russia abstained from a vote. Moscow later fumed that this had led to the fall of Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi.
abd-bjt/des
Indigenous groups demand greater land protection in Brazil protest
AFP AFP
Indigenous protesters from across Brazil marched to the capital Brasilia Tuesday to demand the government expedite recognition of their ancestral lands.
The protest, featuring tribal members in colorful traditional feathers and body decorations, came six months before leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, popularly known as Lula, faces a reelection battle.
Indigenous Brazilian peoples broadly supported Lula in 2022 when he defeated his far-right predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro, whose government ceased to recognize native lands and fueled deforestation in the Amazon.
Lula made an important symbolic gesture by naming a respected figure from the Guajajara-Tenetehara ethnicity, Sonia Guajajara, as the head of the new Ministry of Indigenous Peoples. Â
Lula's government has overseen a drop in Amazon deforestation -- promising to eradicate the felling of trees by 2030 -- and the recognition of 20 territories for the exclusive use of Indigenous communities. Â Â
But for some, the new measures are not enough.  Â
"Our principal demand continues to be the formal recognition of Indigenous territories," Toya Manchineri, from the Coordinator of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon, told AFP.
Experts see the Indigenous reserves as a way to help fight climate change and preserve biodiversity. Â
As Latin America's largest country, Brazil has 1.7 million Indigenous people out of a population of 212 million.  Â
- 'Enemy' Congress -
The Indigenous groups will camp out in Brasilia until Friday, and plan to dance, play music, host artisan markets and debate.Â
Thousands marched to Congress on Tuesday, where the Association of Brazilian Indigenous People (APIB) accused lawmakers of being the "enemies of the people" for their alliance with the powerful agribusiness sector -- one of the main drivers of deforestation.
The majority-conservative Congress approved a law in 2023 that limits Indigenous people's land rights. This was later struck down by the Supreme Court, but right-wing parties are working for new restrictions.
The legal limbo leaves Indigenous areas exposed to the penetration of agribusiness and mining interests, Manchineri said. "The impact is huge."
According to the APIB, a hundred Indigenous territories are awaiting the formal signoff of government recognition.
Despite slow progress, native groups will still "cast their votes for the reelection" of Lula, Manchineri predicts.
Although she demanded "justice and resources" for her community, Marilene Gervasio, from the Bare people, said she hoped the leftist will be reelected.
Lula will face Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, the son of the far-right ex-president, in the October election. The most recent polls show a close second round between them.
rsr/app/jss/dg/jpo/sms/dwÂ
Iran defiant amid looming deadline for U.S. strikes
(The Center Square) - Iranian officials remained defiant on Tuesday as a U.S. deadline for further military strikes on bridges and power plants looms.Â
The United Nations Security Council held a meeting on Tuesday to discuss the ongoing conflict between the U.S. and Iran. The council met to vote on a resolution to protect commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Russia and China vetoed the resolution, causing it to fail.Â
President Donald Trump said "a whole civilization will die tonight" if Iran did not agree to open access in the Strait of Hormuz by Tuesday evening.Â
Amir-Saeid Irvani, the UN representative for Iran, criticized threats from Trump calling for "complete demolition" of the country.
"Iran will not stand idle in the face of such egregious war crimes," Irvani said. "It will exercise without hesitation its inherent right of self defense and will take immediate and proportionate reciprocal measures," Irvani said.Â
Irvani criticized the UN security council for failing to uphold peace and security. He placed blame on the United States and Israel for the consequences of retalitation.Â
Irvani rejected the possibility of a ceasefire to hostilities in Iran, noting that it would serve as the potential for future war crimes.Â
"The United States and Israeli division must bear full responsibility for harm and suffering inflicted upon Iranian civilians, objects and critical infrastructure," Irvani said.Â
Michael Waltz, the United States' ambassador to the UN, placed responsibility for the threats of further military action with Iran. He said Iran's refusal to negotiate and unwillingness to pursue peace in the Middle East led to the current conflict.Â
"[The Iranian regime] is a dictatorship punching at the kneecaps of its neighbors," Waltz said. "Our allies across the gulf and American servicemen are under a barrage of Iranian missiles and drones."
Jamal Fares Alrowaiei, the representative for Bahrain to the UN, criticized Iran's strikes on Middle East countries. He asserted the Iranians were committing war crimes in the conflict.Â
"We are discussing your illegal, terrorist actions by closing the Strait of Hormuz, which harmed international trade, jeopardizing the lives of millions of people," Alrowaiei said.Â
Waltz slammed Iran for its closure of the Strait of Hormuz and warned that similar actions to disrupt global energy supply chains could be devastating in a future conflict.Â
"One can only imagine conflicts where a party decides to hold the rest of the world hostage because of a dispute," Waltz said. "This is a situation the world cannot and should not live with."
The Pentagon floated requesting $200 billion from Congress for operations in Iran but has not confirmed an official figure. Some estimates said the conflict has cost the United States $1 billion per day.Â
Fitzpatrick tries to balance goals ahead of Masters
Jim SLATER AFP
Matt Fitzpatrick said his hot form means he has never been more confident entering the Masters, but the world number six but will be keeping his expectations low when he tees off.
The 31-year-old Englishman, who won last year's season-ending DP World Tour Championship in Dubai, captured last month's PGA Tour Valspar Championship a week after finishing second at the Players Championship.
"It's definitely the most confident I've been," Fitzpatrick said. "I wouldn't say that means I'm going to go out there and play well. The key is obviously to have as low expectations as possible and as high a confidence as possible.
"This is definitely the best form I've been coming into this tournament. Just kind of trying to roll with it and enjoy that."
"Definitely a lot of momentum," Â said the 2022 US Open champion. "The weird thing is winning and then having two weeks off and then you come in again. I think winning the week before is a bit more on a roll. You've got the same swing feels and whatnot.
"In that two weeks off, there's a few things that just felt like were maybe a little bit different," he said.Â
"It's just managing that and making sure I'm on the right track."
Fitzpatrick, who is making his 12th Masters start having made 10 consecutive cuts with a best finish of seventh in 2016.
"The experience is the biggest thing here. The more you can learn about the golf course, the better," Fitzpatrick said.
"There's so much to learn on every different hole, particularly where to put the pins and where to miss around the greens, as well as just looking at the history of the event and what holes you can be a little bit more aggressive on and which holes you need to play smart."
Fitzpatrick spoke to his psychologist ahead of the Masters, working on the balance between confidence and overconfidence.
"It just goes back to the expectation standpoint," he said.
"It's taking the confidence from that, that things have improved so much from where they were last year, but as well as having those expectations you can't have the high expectations.
"I'm playing really well, but golf is golf. It can change quickly or it can continue for how it is."
"Every year I feel like I'm a completely different player to the one before," said Fitzpatrick.
js/pb
Trump branded 'crazy' over apocalyptic Iran threats
Danny KEMP AFP
Donald Trump is no stranger to provocative language. But his threat to wipe out Iranian civilization and other recent menacing comments have prompted critics to question the US president's mental health.
The oldest elected president in American history has ramped up his apocalyptic rhetoric as his frustration grows with Tehran's refusal to make a deal to end the Middle East war.
Even some former allies have called for the 79-year-old Republican's removal from office after a series of outlandish and sometimes expletive-riddled social media posts.Â
The world is now guessing whether Trump will follow through when his Tuesday evening deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz expires -- or back down as the former businessman has often done before.Â
"A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will," Trump posted on his Truth Social network 12 hours before the deadline falls.
As global alarm grew, the White House was forced to dismiss speculation that his statement -- and comments by Vice President JD Vance about "tools in our toolkit that we so far haven't decided to use" -- meant Trump was ready to use nuclear weapons.
In the past, the former New York property magnate has often trumpeted a negotiating style that relies on maximalist positions in order to extract more from a deal.
"He does seem a bit more unhinged than in the past," Peter Loge, director of George Washington University's School of Media, told AFP.
But he added that "this feels to me like a broader pattern of Trump bluster.
"My guess is as we approach one more deadline in a long series of deadlines, the president will declare victory, say I drove Iran to the bargaining table, I'll give them two more weeks.
"Then we'll see this movie again in a couple of weeks."
- 'Evil and madness' -
Even by Trump's own outspoken standards, the 45th and 47th US commander-in-chief has in recent days used distinctly unpresidential language.
"Open the Fuckin' Strait, you crazy bastards, or you'll be living in Hell," Trump said on Truth Social, on the morning of Easter Sunday.
Trump was barely more measured in a series of interactions with the media in the incongruous setting of an Easter Egg Roll at the White House on Monday.
Surrounded by hundreds of kids and alongside a giant Easter Bunny and First Lady Melania Trump, the president denied that targeting Iranian power plants and civil infrastructure would be a war crime.
His extreme language has prompted a slew of critics -- including some one-time allies -- to question Trump's sanity.
"We cannot kill an entire civilization. This is evil and madness," hard-right ex-congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who split with Trump last year, said on X.
Former loyalists including Greene have also joined Democrats calling for Trump's cabinet to invoke the 25th amendment, which provides for a transfer of power if a president is unable to govern, particularly in the event of illness.
Right-wing TV host Tucker Carlson called Trump's Easter Sunday comments the "first step toward nuclear war," ex-White House press secretary Anthony Scaramucci called him a "crazy person" and sought Trump's removal from office, and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones asked on his INFO WARS show: "How do we 25th Amendment his ass?"
Former Democratic vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz meanwhile said "the President has lost his mind."
But Trump himself brushed off questions about his mental health, when asked by an AFP journalist at a briefing at the White House on Monday.
"I haven't heard that," Trump said in response to a question about critics saying his mental state should be examined following his "crazy bastards" comment.
"But if that's the case, you're going to have to have more people like me."
dk-aue/dw
Vance hails Orban as 'model' for Europe in pre-election Hungary visit
Andras ROSTOVANYI AFP
US Vice President JD Vance on Tuesday threw his support behind Hungary's nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban, ahead of this weekend's fiercely fought parliamentary vote, accusing Brussels of "foreign election interference".
Orban -- the EU leader with the closest ties to both US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin -- is facing an unprecedented challenge to his 16-year rule in Sunday's vote.
Vance is one of the US administration's fiercest critics of centrist and progressive European governments and one of the most fervent supporters of far-right parties in Europe.
The 41-year-old conservative in his visit to the Hungarian capital Budapest hailed Orban as a "model" for Europe.
"I did want to send a signal to everybody, particularly the bureaucrats in Brussels," he told reporters in a press conference alongside Orban, accusing Brussels of interfering "to hold down the people of Hungary".
Later, at a rally with Orban in an indoor sports arena, Vance told thousands of cheering listeners that he and Trump stood "shoulder to shoulder" with the Hungarian leader.
Before his speech, he had Trump on the phone on loudspeaker, who said "I love that Viktor".
- 'Inspiring' -
Eszter Molnar, a 39-year-old lawyer who attended the event with her one-year-old daughter, said Vance's visit was "inspiring" as "his values align with those of the Hungarian government".
"I'm glad that Hungarian–American relations have risen to such a good level," she told AFP.
Adorjan Somogyi, an 18-year-old student, said the visit was important "from a foreign policy perspective" but wouldn't sway many voters.
Vance's visit follows that of US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in mid-February, who wished his Hungarian ally "success" in the April 12 election.
Orban said in the press conference earlier that he had discussed the "major issues facing Western civilisation" with Vance, such as "migration, gender ideology, family policy, and global security".Â
He also slammed the "unusually crude and overt interference by foreign intelligence services in Hungary's electoral processes".
- Election challenge -
Orban, 62, has been in power for 16 years and is close to Moscow.Â
According to analysts, Orban has benefited from covert Russian assistance to boost his chances of reelection.
However, polls by independent institutes predict a sweeping victory for the Tisza party led by pro-European conservative Peter Magyar.Â
In two years, Magyar has built an opposition movement capable of challenging Orban.
Pro-government institutions are predicting victory for Orban's Fidesz-KDNP coalition.
Since returning to power, Trump and his government have broken with the traditional restraint past US administrations have shown regarding foreign elections.
Instead, they now strongly show support for leaders they sees as compatible with US diplomatic priorities.
European Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier said in a statement on Tuesday that elections were the "sole choice of the citizens," adding that "together, the commission and member states are building a stronger, more independent Europe."
Orban is particularly aligned with the Trump administration on anti-migrant policies, which came to the fore in Hungary during the refugee crisis 10 years ago. He has visited Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida several times.
Hungary continues to be heavily reliant on Russian energy, claiming it is vital to keep energy costs low.
burs-jza/st
Cyber, nuclear, invasion? What is Trump threatening in Iran
W.G. DUNLOP AFP
Donald Trump's increasingly apocalyptic threats of destruction in Iran have raised concerns of just how far the US president might go militarily to bend the Islamic republic to his will.
Trump announced Tuesday that "a whole civilization will die" if Iran does not heed his ultimatum to accept US war demands, while Vice President JD Vance warned that Washington had additional "tools in our toolkit" that could be deployed against Tehran.
- New 'tools' -
The United States has already used a wide variety of military capabilities in the conflict to strike thousands of targets in Iran.
"The US has employed a significant number of its most advanced capabilities in the war -- air assets, cruise missiles, advanced stealth bombers, one-way attack drones," said Daniel Schneiderman, director of global policy programs at Penn Washington, the University of Pennsylvania's center in the nation's capital.
There may be "exquisite unique hypersonic capabilities or other bespoke systems that could be used against specific targets," he said.
But "unless we're talking about nuclear weapons, I don't think the administration has limited itself in terms of what it is employing."
US officials have also refused to rule out the deployment of ground troops -- a step that would mark a major escalation in the war.
Etienne Marcuz, associate researcher at French think-tank FRS, said that "among the things they can still do, there is the possibility of cyber" warfare.
Trump has said US forces employed a weapon he referred to as the "discombobulator" during the January raid to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro that helped disable the country's military equipment.
- Nuclear option 'unlikely' -
Trump's threat to wipe out Iranian civilization has sparked speculation that nuclear weapons could be employed in Iran. In addition to massive city-destroying strategic warheads, Washington also possesses smaller "tactical" weapons designed to be used on the battlefield.
The United States is the only country to have used nuclear weapons in combat -- against Japan late in World War II -- and Trump ordered a resumption of nuclear testing last year.
The White House pushed back Tuesday against suggestions that Washington could target Iran with nuclear weapons, saying that "literally nothing" Vance said implied it would do so.
Schneiderman said it is "highly unlikely that the US will choose to use nuclear weapons against Iran. It is the ultimate Rubicon to cross."
He noted that consequences of a nuclear strike include "the loss of life and human suffering that would be unleashed, the global economic turmoil and environmental impacts of nuclear fallout circulating in the atmosphere, and the rendering of Iran's oil and natural gas exports functionally unusable."
Marcuz agreed, saying the "political cost of such a deployment would be enormous," and that it could "pave the way for similar action by Russia in Ukraine."
-What will US do? -
Trump has already threatened that the United States could bomb Iran's bridges, power plants and other civilian infrastructure into the "stone age."
If Trump's ultimatum expires Tuesday without a deal, "there's a possibility the administration escalates their attacks on dual-use infrastructure like bridges and power and energy systems," Schneiderman said.
"The risk of lasting damage to Iran's infrastructure and the immiseration of the population above and beyond what they're already experiencing is significant," he said.
"The likelihood that these strikes achieve a strategic effect on the course of the war is minimal, and the likelihood they harm the civilian population is high."
wd/mlm
McIlroy starting with Young, Howell in Masters repeat bid
AFP AFP
Defending champion Rory McIlroy will tee off alongside third-ranked Cameron Young and US Amateur winner Mason Howell on Thursday in first-round tee times for the 90th Masters announced on Tuesday.
McIlroy, the world number two from Northern Ireland who completed a career Grand Slam last year with his first Masters title, starts in Thursday's 15th group at 10:31 a.m. (1431 GMT).
Young won last month's Players Championship while fellow American Howell captured last year's US Amateur at The Olympic Club in San Francisco aged 18.
In other groupings, top-ranked Scottie Scheffler is in the 30th and penultimate group at 1:44 p.m. alongside fellow American Gary Woodland and Scotsman Robert MacIntyre.
Two-time Masters winner Scheffler, the reigning PGA Championship and British Open champion, won at LaQuinta earlier this year.Â
Woodland took an emotional PGA Houston Open victory two weeks ago, his first triumph since the 2019 US Open. Earlier last month, Woodland revealed he still fights anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder following 2023 brain surgery.
MacIntyre, last year's US Open runner-up, was second in last week's Texas Open.
Following ceremonial starters Jack Nicklaus, Gary Players and Tom Watson, are the twosome of American John Keefer and China's Li Haotong.
Americans Bryson DeChambeau and Xander Schauffele and England's Matt Fitzpatrick start Thursday at 10:07 a.m. with Americans Collin Morikawa and Russell Henley joining Japan's Hideki Matsuyama 12 minutes later in the group just ahead of McIlroy's trio.
Other later groups include Spain's Jon Rahm, Sweden's Ludvig Aberg and American Chris Gotterup at 1:08 p.m. followed by England's Justin Rose and Americans Brooks Koepka and Jordan Spieth.
js/pb
Picasso's 'Guernica' at heart of battle in Spain over location
Marie GIFFARD AFP
Pablo Picasso’s anti-war masterpiece "Guernica" is swept up in a conflict in Spain, where Basque leaders want the government in Madrid to move the painting to their region, whose 1937 bombing inspired it.
The mural-sized painting has been on display since 1992 at the Reina Sofia museum in the Spanish capital, and repeated requests for it to be moved to Spain's Basque Country have been refused.
The latest demand was made by the head of the regional Basque government, Imanol Pradales, during talks with Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.
The Basque government wants the painting to be hung in the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the April 26, 1937 bombing, in which forces from Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy razed the town of Guernica to help General Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War.
Bringing the painting to Bilbao from October until June would be a form of "reparation and historical memory", the Basque government said.
Sanchez -- whose minority government depends on the support of two Basque parties in parliament to pass laws -- did not reject the proposal outright, instead referring it to the culture ministry.
The ministry asked the Reina Sofia museum for a technical report on the viability of the request, which once again "strongly advised" against moving the painting.
The report said the painting is too fragile to travel, citing risks of damage from vibration or movement.
Picasso's black-and-white masterpiece is the highlight of the Reina Sofia museum, which welcomed around 1.6 million visitors last year.
The outspoken head of the regional government of Madrid, Isabel Diaz Ayuso of the conservative Popular Party (PP), weighed in on Monday, calling the request to move the painting "provincial".
"It makes no sense for everything to be returned to its origin. In that case we should send all of Picasso’s works to Malaga," she said, a reference to the southern Spanish city where Picasso was born.
- Return from New York -
Asked about the controversy on Tuesday, Spain's central government spokeswoman Elma Saiz said the government relies on the advice of "professionals", referring to the museum report, and "never resorts to insults".
Painted in 1937 in the aftermath of the bombing, "Guernica" debuted in Paris at the World's Fair, then was placed in the care of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
When Franco's forces overthrew the Spanish republic, Picasso stipulated that the painting should not return to Spain until democracy had been restored.
The work was moved to Spain in 1981, six years after Franco's death.
It was first displayed at the Prado museum, then moved to the Reina Sofia in 1992.
Picasso, who died in 1973, never lived to see the painting on exhibit in Spain.
In 1995, Spanish authorities refused to lend it to the Pompidou Centre in Paris, citing the damage the work could suffer during its transport.
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