
Соліст “ТІК” Віктор Бронюк висловився про чутки щодо залежності Ляпіса Трубєцкого, з яким він співпрацював

LOVE Island’s first bombshell can be revealed by The Sun after Maya Jama teased it was a American girl – and she’s already in the villa.
The sexy Yank is Antonia Laites, a pool party waitress from Las Vegas.
Antonia is a hot brunette who looks after the VIP cabanas at posh Fontainebleau Resort in Sun City.
She’s also lived in Miami.
The beauty strutted into the villa on the very first day to shake up the action from the off.
A source said: “Being Love Island’s first bombshell of the series is a big deal and is always reserved for the sexiest cast members.
“In the past it’s been the likes of Davide, Uma and even Ekin-Su on All Stars.
“Antonia landed as part of a huge first day and everyone is very excited.”
She arrives in the love nest at a great time as the ITV2 dating show is celebrating its 10th anniversary- and has hit 2 BILLION streams on ITVX.
It comes after Maya teased the bombshell’s arrival on social media when she played a voice note.
Love Island begins tomorrow night at 9pm on ITV2 and ITVX
THERE is “no doubt” Iran would use a nuclear bomb on its enemies, a female activist has revealed.
IT researcher Fereshteh, from Tehran, warned the “crisis-stricken regime” is clinging on to power by forcing its people to live in extreme poverty and ramping up executions.
Speaking to The Sun, Fereshteh, 35, revealed that she joined a resistance unit of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran after the regime tortured and executed her beloved sister.
Hundreds of resistance units have been set up all over the country – aimed at undermining the regime’s authority.
Members organise and lead protests, destroying statues and images of regime leaders and documenting human rights abuses.
Fereshteh revealed the situation in Iran is a “powder-keg” and a “ticking time bomb” ready to explode as Iranians grow angrier than ever at repression, corruption and high prices.
She says things are worse now than in September 2022 when the death of a Kurdish girl named Mahsa Amini triggered mass protests.
Outraged citizens in more than 280 cities in 31 provinces of Iran took to the streets and brought the mullahs’ regime to the brink of collapse.
Fereshteh said: “There was the massacre of more than 750 innocent people by the State Security Forces, which were in fact street executions.
“More than 30,000 arrests involved torture and heavy bails for release, sometimes rape.
“And the abandonment of bodies in rivers or unfinished buildings, sometimes poisoning people with tainted juice or toxic serums in prisons, and the intentional failure to care for sick or tortured prisoners that led to their death, and many other crimes, the protests continued for months.
“The outraged people had nothing more to lose.
“After that, the regime tried hard to impose an atmosphere of repression by increasing executions and creating a suffocating environment.”
Fareshteh said there was a 34 per cent increase in executions in 2023 – with 860 in one year.
In 2024, there were at least 1,000 – and this year, new records are being set month by month.
“Now the situation is worse than before,” Fareshteh said.
“Inflation is crippling, and while people’s salaries and incomes have not changed much, the exchange rate has risen.
“The Iranian people are almost four times poorer, and prices have increased by the same amount, most people’s tables are getting smaller every year, and more are living below the poverty line.”
Fereshteh said the regime’s brutality towards its own people has increased since the Syrian tyrant Bashar al-Assad was ousted by rebels last December.
“This regime has no solution other than increasing executions at home, especially after the fall of the Syrian dictator and the
successive blows to its proxy forces in the region,” she said.
The mullahs’ regime tortured and executed my innocent sister, even burying her body themselves, creating lasting trauma for my family that I will never forget or forgive
Fareshten, resistance unit member
“Ali Khamenei, the regime’s Supreme Leader, used to call Syria, its strategic depth, and he repeatedly said that if we don’t fight in Syria and Iraq, we will have to face the enemy in Iran’s major cities.
“Now, the regime sees its only way out in trying harder to build nuclear weapons and acquire a bomb.
“In the absence of any solution in the crisis-stricken mullah regime, the situation in Iran is like a powder keg.
“And everyone, even the regime’s leaders, constantly warn about the explosion of people’s outrage from repression, corruption, and high prices.
“The difference is that the people of Iran, especially the youth, know that the regime has never been in its current state of weakness.”
Fareshteh revealed how her activities for her resistance unit include painting political graffiti and encouraging others to stand against the regime.
She said she joined the unit to avenge her sister’s death which she will neither “forget or forgive”.
Being a member of the resistance in Iran can carry a death sentence, but Fareshteh remains undeterred.
She said: “I am the continuer and avenger of my beloved sister, who was the top student in her high school in mathematics and physics.
“The mullahs’ regime tortured and executed my innocent sister, even burying her body themselves, creating lasting trauma for my family that I will never forget or forgive.
“I carry out activities involving posting pictures and doing graffiti, and I speak to and raise awareness among the people about the social responsibility that rests on all of us.
“International support is very important. At one time, the regime’s lobbies deceived foreign countries by pretending that everything was fine in Iran.”
She added: “In the 2022 uprising, technology unveiled the countless crimes of the corrupt and murderous regime.
“International solidarity will press Western governments to stop appeasing and dealing with this dictatorship.”
Fareshteh’s comments comes after the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) presented shocking details about a covert nuclear weapons facility operated by the regime.
Chilling satellite pictures released last month showed a secret nuclear site codenamed “Rainbow”.
It is believed the base is being used to develop nuclear missiles with a 2,000 mile (3,000km) range.
The NCRI say that Tehran is using oil and chemical facilities as a front to create terrifying nuclear weapons with the ability to strike US bases in the Middle East.
Feresteh says the discovery of the base comes as no surprise as the regime’s goal has always been to acquire an atomic bomb to “blackmail” the international community.
“Repression at home and the export of terrorism and fomenting crisis have been one of the foundations of this regime’s survival since its inception,” she said.
Now, the regime sees its only way out in trying harder to build nuclear weapons and acquire a bomb
Fareshteh, resistance unit member
“In the past two years, everyone has seen that the main obstacle to peace and security in the region has been the mullah regime.
“After the fall of the Assad dictatorship… the only way out it sees is to increase executions at home and increase its activities to acquire an atomic bomb as a lever to continue blackmail the international community.
“This regime has not stopped trying to acquire a bomb for even a day.
“And the recent revelation… clearly exposes the regime’s unreliability and deception in its pursuit of a bomb.”
Exclusive by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital)
CHILLING satellite pictures reveal Iran’s sprawling secret nuclear site codenamed “Rainbow”.
Sources in the country have uncovered how the base is being used to develop nuclear-capable missiles with a 2,000-mile range – able to strike US bases in the Middle East.
Tehran’s tyrannical regime is using oil and chemical facilities as a cover for nuclear bases, bombshell docs shared with The Sun by the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) reveal.
Haunting aerial images expose a network of clandestine sites – including “Rainbow” – used by iron-fist leaders to create terrifying nuclear weapons.
A powerful nuclear blast from Iran could have disastrous consequences for the Middle East – and beyond – thanks to the capability of the warheads.
Now sources inside Iran have revealed the regime’s nuclear weaponisation entity, Organization of Defensive Innovation and Research’s (SPND) secret project to accelerate nuclear ability.
Hidden under the guise of a chemical production facility, the crowning jewel of the operation is a base known internally as the “Rangin Kaman (Rainbow) Site”.
It is some distance from Iran’s already known nuke bases, and is masked as a chemical production company known as Diba Energy Siba.
Fereshteh said that despite facing “unprecedented repression and executions” the regime has failed to contain protests and even executions are not intimidating the public as they once did.
She told how the political prisoners at some of Iran’s most notorious prisons have been on hunger strike every Tuesday for 68 weeks as a protest against the death penalty.
“Every week, their statement, which is courageously smuggled out of prison and published, speaks of their fighting spirit and loyalty to their commitment to freedom and the rejection of the death penalty,” Fereshteh said.
“Imagine that they are trapped in the prisons of religious fascism, but despite all the pressure the regime exerts on them, these strikes have continued for 68 weeks.
“The people’s anger and hatred grow stronger each day.
“During the uprisings, I witnessed young girls, and even elderly women remove their hijabs when passing by the oppressors, signaling their defiance.
“The intensity of this anger has reached a point where the regime no longer dares to harass women for not wearing hijabs as aggressively as before.”
Fereshteh has now called on the governments of the US and UK to “stand with the Iranian people” to prevent the regime completing its nuclear programme.
She said: “The British government must immediately activate the trigger mechanism to prevent the regime from having more time to complete its nuclear program.
“Since this regime will under no circumstances abandon its efforts to produce a bomb, this again underscores the necessity for the West to stand with the main opposition to this regime and the people of Iran and to provide political support for their efforts to change the regime.”
She added: “Not a day passes without various segments of the population – retirees, workers, teachers, nurses, medical staff, students, and those whose wealth has been plundered by IRGC-affiliated gangs – taking to the streets to protest against the regime.
“Moreover, the increasing demonstrations from farmers and factories and businesses facing ongoing water and power shortages illustrate that we are witnessing an explosive society.
“Today, in Iran, there is no segment of society whose patience has not run out with this anti-people regime.
“The regime has managed to maintain its grip on power solely through blatant repression and a daily increase in executions.
“For decades, the people of Iran have watched with disbelief and pain the leniency and wrong policies of the West towards a regime that is the main cause of instability and warmongering in the region and terrorism globally.
“No one here doubts that the ruling fascist regime must go, and the only way to end the crimes at home and the warmongering, terrorism, and support for terrorist forces abroad is to end this regime.
“This is achievable.
“Our expectation from the international community is to stand with the people and resistance of Iran.”
ROBERT DOWNEY hailed boss Pat Ryan after Cork ended Limerick’s supremacy in Munster in an epic final that went to a thrilling penalty shootout.
Ryan led his side to provincial glory for the first time since 2018 last night.
And skipper Downey said: “I don’t think he realises how much we love him.
“But on days like these, I’m going to tell him. Pat, we love you to bits.”
Beaten boss John Kiely felt the Rebels got ‘the rub of the green’ with the amount of added time played by stand-in referee James Owens.
The Limerick gaffer said: “We felt that there were three minutes gone.
“It’s hard to find three minutes of added time in a ten-minute half.”
At the end of extra-time, one additional minute was signalled.
But there were 3min and 45sec on the clock when Cork’s Darragh Fitzgibbon scored the 65 that sent the contest to penalties.
Kiely continued: “We’ll have to go back, watch the tape, analyse it and break it down before we formulate a concrete opinion.
“But it was a little, I suppose, difficult to understand.”
Three weeks after they suffered a 16-point hammering at the hands of the same opposition, Cork scuppered Limerick’s seven-in-a-row quest following an engrossing affair at the Gaelic Grounds.
Ryan said: “We were just focused on coming up here and really going to battle with Limerick and representing the jersey, representing our people.
“The people are spending money to come up here and we didn’t give them any value for money the last day.
“I think both teams gave fierce value for money to their supporters today and to everyone.
“We have no doubt in the character of our fellas. We have no doubt in the ability that they have.
“I think everybody has said that. You have to go and prove it every time.
“I’m here three years. We thought that performance three weeks ago was gone out of this team. As I said, I genuinely take a bit of blame for that.”
Ryan’s own frustration with ref Thomas Walsh — who went off injured in extra-time — seemed apparent as he approached the Waterford official at half-time.
But the Cork chief said: “We’re all fighting tooth and nail for the calls.
“The game is so fast. Thomas is a fantastic referee. We’re fighting for calls. John Kiely is fighting for calls. That’s just the nature of it.”
Asked why he approached Walsh, Ryan responded: “Just to say he was doing a great job.”