Reuters World News - Trump’s World Cup call, Iran’s funeral procession and Venezuela's death toll
Episode Date: July 6, 2026FIFA clears red-carded U.S. striker Folarin Balogun to play against Belgium after President Donald Trump called FIFA chief Gianni Infantino. Mourners line the streets of Tehran for the funeral ...procession of slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as his son and successor remains out of sight. And Venezuela's earthquake death toll tops 3,300 as survivors face the grim task of identifying the dead. Listen to the Morning Bid podcast here. Sign up for the Reuters Econ World newsletter here. Listen to the Reuters Econ World podcast here. Visit the Thomson Reuters Privacy Statement for information on our privacy and data protection practices. You may also visit megaphone.fm/adchoices to opt out of targeted advertising. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, I'm Kim Vinell in Wanganui, New Zealand. It's Monday, July 6th, today.
FIFA moves the goalposts after a call from Donald Trump, allowing a red-carded player back onto the field.
Iranians take to the streets for the funeral procession of their slain supreme leader.
And Venezuela grapples with a rising death toll and destroyed infrastructure.
This is Reuters' World World War.
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FIFA is facing accusations. It's bowing to political pressure. After announcing it will let
suspended U.S. striker for Lauren Balagan play following a phone call from U.S. President
Donald Trump. Balagan received a red card when the U.S. played Bosnia and Herzegovina last
week, a penalty which usually means the player is suspended for at least one game.
Belgium, which faces the US tonight, says it's astonished by the decision and is exploring its options.
Trump took to social media, thanking FIFA for, quote, reversing a great injustice.
Senior sports correspondent Rohit Nair has more.
So US President Donald Trump spoke to Gianni and Fantino earlier this week and a source briefed on the call said he had asked FIFA to review the red card for Mulligan.
And three days later, we've got the statement saying he's free to pay.
play. It really doesn't look good for FIFA because we all saw the red card Balogun
got in the previous game where he stepped on a Bosnian player's ankle and a red card means
you are automatically suspended for the next match, especially in the World Cup. And that is a big
decision and FIFA have never changed a decision like that. Roheath says red cards have been
rescinded before if it's decided after the fact that it was the wrong call. But in this
case, the red card stands. It's just that the punishment of a ban is being suspended for a year
unless Falagan makes another foul. FIFA's disciplinary committee has the discretion to either
fully or partially suspend the implementation of a disciplinary sanction. But that's what Belgium
are trying to say that when there is a red card and a sending off, they don't have those powers.
And the Belgian coach, Rudy Garcia, actually came out and said, his exact exact exact,
words where I didn't know July 5th was actually April Fool's Day at the World Cup.
FIFA did not respond to multiple Reuters' requests for comment. But with the decision
sparking a firestorm, Rohit says the optics aren't great. FIFA really takes a tough stance on
government interference in many national associations, national football associations, because they
have suspended many different countries before because of political interference or government
interference in the affairs of the country's football operations.
So this is not a very good look for US soccer, I would say.
In other World Cup news, Brazil, who last missed out on a World Cup quarterfinal place in 1990,
have been knocked out in the round of 16 by Norway, who have now qualified for the quarter
finals for the first time ever.
And a 10-man England are also through weathering a Mexico-execkel.
storm with a rip-roaring 3-2 victory over the co-hosts, thanks to a Jude Balingham double and
Harry Kane penalty. For more World Cup news, as it all comes down to the wire, check out
our show Reuters Pitchside, wherever you get your podcasts.
Iranians turn out on the streets of Tehran to walk in a funeral procession for late Supreme
Leader Ali Khomeini. It's the biggest day in a week of ceremonies honoring Kharmony, who led the
from 1989 until he was killed in U.S. and Israeli strikes on the first day of the war.
Millions are expected, according to authorities.
On Sunday, Mornis signed messages on the walls of Tehran's Grand Masala, including 26-year-old
Mustafa Nayib, who says he hopes the late leader's blood doesn't remain unanswered for.
Also on Sunday, three of Khomeini's sons appeared primarily.
beside the leader's coffin, but not his successor, Moshtaba.
He hasn't been seen publicly and no images have been released of him
since before the attack which killed his father and which he was also injured.
This week's event are a carefully curated effort to show a message of national unity,
as Reuters' lead writer for the Middle East, Angus McDowell, explains.
Iran has just survived a war with what it sees as its greatest and most powerful.
powerful enemies. So there's a certain amount of triumphalism there. But what you also have to
remember is that only a few months ago in January, there were mass nationwide protests
spelt off by the economy, but ultimately against the ruling system, and these were put down
with enormous force. And so what the ruling clerics in Iran really want to do is to send
a message both of power and of national unity.
to say we are still a revolutionary bureaucracy, the people still back that, and that's a message
that they want to get across both internally and to Iran's foes overseas.
Not only have we not seen Munchibah, we haven't even seen a photograph of him, a video of
him, or heard any voicemail from him since he was appointed supreme leader.
Now, what we know from sources is that he was very badly injured in the airsteck that kills his father
on the first day of the war, facially disfigured, may have lost a limb, but that he is slowly
recovering. Now, that, of course, may well explain a lot of why we haven't seen him so far,
but the Iranian authorities, the security services there, they may well also be very concerned
about his safety. His father was killed in an airstrike, and are they really sure that the United
States and Israel won't have another go?
Over the weekend, you may well have seen a Reuters photo which went viral of a young black woman sitting on the DC metro
surrounded by masked members of the white nationalist Patriot Front group.
The photo, captured by photographer Cheney Orr, is being described as the defining image of the moment,
sparking discussions around extremism, racism and political division.
Members of the group marched through Washington, D.C. on July 4th.
Many of them carrying the Confederate flag, at times chanting, reclaim America.
In Venezuela, 12-year-old Fabiana Blanco recalls the moment the earthquakes hit and her apartment fell.
She says it's a miracle she ended up in what's called the Triangle of Life,
wedged between concrete rubble in a small triangle of space.
Cameras captured the moment rescuers found her.
Where she'd spend 30 hours trapped.
The death toll from the earthquakes has now surpassed 3,300.
Reuters Julius Sims Cobb is in Caracas.
So they've converted what is usually the port in La Guayra into a temporary morgue,
and they have all these tents set up where family members can come and try to identify any of the bodies that are there.
And then they do the process of either handing the body over to the family or cremating them.
But it's quite an operation.
Obviously, as time goes on, it becomes a lot more delicate because you're dealing with, of course, remains that have been outdoors in pretty terrible conditions for over 10 days.
Protesters in Turkey chant no passage for NATO
as they march through the streets of the capital Ankara.
Authorities detained more than 100 demonstrators
at the event organised by the Communist Party of Turkey
despite a blanket ban.
NATO leaders will gather in Turkey for a summit starting tomorrow.
A forest fire in southwestern France
has forced organizers of the Tour de France
to close the third stage,
of the race to the public. Some 750 firefighters have been deployed to the area to fight the fire.
For more on any of the stories from today, check out Reuters.com or the Reuters app. Don't forget to
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