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Argentina, Colombia dispute semis spot at futsal World Cup

ARGENTINA VS FILIPINA5 — FACEBOOK.COM/PHIFOOTBALLFEDERATION

Matches on Monday
(PhilSports Arena)
6 p.m. – Argentina vs Colombia
8:30 p.m. – Spain vs Morocco

SOUTH AMERICAN titans Argentina and Colombia rekindle their rivalry as they dispute a ticket to the semifinals of the FIFA Futsal Women’s World Cup on Monday at the PhilSports Arena.

The world No. 6 Argentines go into the marquee quarterfinal duel at 6 p.m. with the momentum of a spotless three-game run in Group A capped by a 5-1 verdict over host Philippines.

The Albiceleste were among the first to clinch a Last-8 ticket early after victories over Morocco, 6-0, and Poland, 3-2.

On the other hand the No. 8 Colombians split their first two assignments in Group B then banked on a 4-1 win over Thailand to claim the second and last quarters slot.

“They’re a very good team, they finished first in their group. And it’s going to be a heated match, because we’re two very strong South American teams,” Colombia winger Nicole Mancilla said of the Argentines.

“It’s a final,” Colombia fixo Merlin Salcedo said in highlighting the enormity of this showdown. “It will be about who makes fewer mistakes, who shows the most heart. We’ll have to give it everything.”

Also seeking to advance to the semis of the inaugural showpiece for women’s futsal supported by the Philippine Sports Commission and Philippine Football Federation are Spain and Morocco.

The 8:30 p.m. pairing pits a traditional power in the No. 2 Spaniards, the Group B topnotcher, and a fast-rising side in the 31st Moroccans, Group A’s runner-up.

La Roja, a three-time Euro champion, breezed to the quarters with a 3-0 sweep of their group while the Atlas Lionesses, winner of this year’s Africa Cup of Nations, had to beat the Filipina5, 3-2, and Poland, 1-0, to catch the bus to quarters as Group A No. 2.

Meanwhile, the Last 8 continues on Tuesday with Group D ruler and world No. 1 Brazil taking on Group C No. 2 Japan and Group C supremo Portugal facing Group D No. 2 Italy.

The semifinal matches are set for Friday. — Olmin Leyba

Ateneo knocks off Adamson to reach next rung of UAAP women’s stepladder

ATENEO BLUE EAGLES VS ADAMSON LADY FALCONS — UAAP/STEVE MARION

Games on Wednesday
(Smart Araneta Coliseum)
8:30 a.m. – FEU-D vs UST (U16 Boys’ Stepladder Semis)
10:30 a.m. – ADMU vs NU (Women’s Stepladder Semis)
1:30 p.m. – NU* vs DLSU (Men’s Final Four)
4:30 p.m. – UP* vs UST (Men’s Final Four)
*Twice-to-beat

VENGEFUL ATENEO knocked off Adamson, 66-56, and climbed to the next step on the ladder of the UAAP Season 88 women’s basketball semifinals on Sunday at the Mall of Asia Arena.

The third-ranked Blue Eagles staged an 11-0 run to open the payoff period and never looked back for a revenge win on the No. 4 Lady Falcons, plus a shot at reigning champion and No. 2 seed National U (NU) Lady Bulldogs.

Ateneo and NU will figure in another knockout battle with the survivor meeting Santo Tomas in the best-of-three finals. The Tigresses clinched an outright finals berth by sweeping the two-round eliminations, 14-0.

The Blue Eagles made sure to stay in contention for a shot at the mighty Santo Tomas behind two-time Most Valuable Player Kacey Dela Rosa, who had a monstrous double-double of 17 points and 20 rebounds, plus three assists, two blocks and a steal.

Kailah Oani and Camille Malagar added 13 and 12 points, respectively, as Nigerian anchor Sarah Makanjuola scattered nine points, 16 rebounds, five assists, two steals and two blocks.

“Adamson made a run but our defense held up. That’s what we talked about. We really admire Adamson, we learn a lot of things from them. They’re a very tough and scrappy team. Today, with God’s help we were able to pull through,” head coach LA Mumar said as Ateneo finally secured a podium finish.

The Blue Eagles finished fourth in the last three seasons, including a 59-53 overtime defeat to the Lady Falcons in the first stage of the stepladder semis last season.

Ateneo nearly stumbled again with only a six-point lead after three quarters before pulling away with an 11-0 blast to erect a 65-48 lead heading home.

The Blue Eagles’ defense left the Lady Falcons without a field goal until the last four minutes, priming up for a duel against the reigning champ.

Gusto ko lang din mapatunayan sa NU na hindi lang sila ‘yung kaya makipagcompete sa ganoong level pero kami rin. We just prayed for that win,” Ms. Dela Rosa said.

Elaine Etang scored 18 points while Kemi Adeshina had 10 points and nine rebounds for Adamson, which still impressed under first-year mentor Jed Colonia, also a former Falcon.

In the U16 division, Elite Team members Dwyne Enriquez (29) and Prince Cariño (20) connived as the third-seeded Far Eastern U-Diliman eliminated No. 4 Adamson, 90-76.

The Baby Tamaraws will face the second-ranked Santo Tomas Tiger Cubs on the next step of the ladder for a shot at NU-Nazareth School Bullpups, who swept the elims, 14-0. — John Bryan Ulanday

The scores:

Ateneo 66 – Dela Rosa 17, Oani 13, Malagar 12, Makanjuola 9, Cancio 7, Lopez 3, Villacruz 2, De Luna 2, Batongbakal 1

AdU 56 – Etang 18, Adeshina 10, Apag 9, Limbago 5, Ornopia 4, Padilla 3, Bajo 3, Meniano 2, E. Alaba 2, Agojo 0, A. Alaba 0, Muñoz 0, Mazo 0

Quarterscores: 20-14, 32-31, 54-48, 66-56

Pistons nearly blow big lead, halt Miami Heat win streak

PISTONS VS HEAT — NBA.COM

CADE CUNNINGHAM had 29 points and eight assists as the visiting Detroit Pistons held off the Miami Heat, 138-135, on Saturday.

Tobias Harris supplied a season-high 26 points for the Pistons, who nearly squandered a 22-point lead in the fourth but snapped a two-game skid. Duncan Robinson, playing against his former team for the first time, tossed in 18 points while Paul Reed added 13 with 10 rebounds.

Andrew Wiggins led Miami, which saw its six-game winning streak snapped, with 31 points. Norman Powell had 28 points and Tyler Herro contributed 24. Bam Adebayo added a double-double with 15 points and 10 rebounds.

Detroit scored the last 13 points of the first quarter and led 71-59 at halftime. Cunningham had 19 points and Robinson contributed 11 as the Pistons shot 59.2% from the field in the opening half.

Wiggins led three Heat players in double digits with 13 points before intermission. Miami shot just 39.1% from the field over the first two quarters.

The Pistons maintained a double-digit lead in the third. An 8-0 spurt that included two baskets by Harris pushed the advantage to 88-69. Wiggins scored five straight points midway through the quarter to cut Detroit’s lead to 12.

A Powell layup after a Pistons turnover cut Detroit’s advantage to 99-89. The Pistons then turned up the defensive intensity, making a couple of steals during a 9-2 run to finish the quarter and carry a 108-91 lead into the fourth.

Harris opened the quarter with a 3-pointer to stretch the advantage to 20. He hit another to make it 118-99. Ronald Holland II’s three-point play with 8:09 left gave the Pistons a 22-point lead.

The Heat refused to give up. They kept chipping away, and when Herro knocked down a 3-pointer with 1:25 left, Detroit’s lead was down to five.

Following a Pistons turnover, Powell was fouled on a 3-point try and made all three free throws to make it 131-129. Daniss Jenkins answered with a layup. Adebayo and Cunningham then traded baskets. Jenkins hit three free throws in the closing seconds to clinch Detroit’s win. Reuters

IM Arca tops Asian U16 blitz tourney

CHRISTIAN GIAN KARLO ARCA — FACEBOOK.COM/NCFPCHESS

INTERNATIONAL MASTER (IM) Christian Gian Karlo Arca saved the best for last as he topped the open Under-16 (U16) blitz section for the Philippines’ lone gold medal in the 27th Asian Youth Chess Championships in Thailand.

Mr. Arca scored 7.5 points on seven wins and a draw against a single defeat to claim the title after finishing ahead of Vietnamese FIDE Master Dinh Nho Kiet and Indian IM Ethan Vaz, who wound up second and third, respectively, with seven points apiece.

It didn’t matter that Mr. Arca suffered his one and only defeat in the ninth and final round to Mr. Vaz. But Mr. Arca could have lost the gold had Mr. Dinh won over Iranian Amirreza Kerdegar.

Fate, however, favored the 16-year-old Filipino though as Mr. Kerdegar stunned Mr. Dinh instead.

It was Mr. Arca’s second medal after he took the silver in the standard class a few days back.

He came close to pulling off a third podium finish after he finished tied for first with four others in the rapid section but heartbreakingly wound up fourth after tiebreaks were applied.

Also medalling was Marius Constante, who snatched a bronze in the open U8. — Joey Villar

Siakam buzzer-beater lifts Pacers past Bulls

PASCAL SIAKAM hit a 14-foot jumper at the buzzer and finished with 24 points and nine rebounds as the Indiana Pacers beat the Chicago Bulls, 103-101, on Saturday in Indianapolis.

Chicago’s Tre Jones scored on a driving layup with 7.5 seconds left to tie the game. Indiana called a timeout to set up a play for Siakam, who shot over two defenders to help the Pacers win back-to-back games for the first time this season.

Bennedict Mathurin had 19 points for Indiana, which won for the fourth time in its first 20 games. Isaiah Jackson, Jay Huff and Andrew Nembhard each scored 14 points.

Chicago led 99-98 after Nikola Vucevic made two foul shots before Indiana moved ahead 100-99 on Siakam’s turnaround jumper with 1:10 left. Nembhard converted one of two foul shots with 10.7 seconds remaining, and the Bulls’ pulled even on Jones’ layup.

Siakam’s game-winner capped a contest that featured six ties and 13 lead changes. Jones and Josh Giddey led Chicago with 17 points apiece. Vucevic had 16 points, eight rebounds and six assists, while Kevin Huerter and Ayo Dosunmu each had 15 points.

Giddey added 11 boards and seven assists for the Bulls, who have lost three straight and four of their last five. Huff opened the game by scoring Indiana’s first 14 points, including four 3-pointers.

Despite his scoring spree, the Pacers trailed 27-26 at the end of the first quarter. Indiana built a 38-27 lead after beginning the second quarter on a 12-0 run. Dosunmu’s 3-pointer capped a 16-3 run and put the Bulls ahead 43-41 with 6:08 left in the opening half.

The Pacers made 12 3-pointers in the first half and held a 61-54 advantage at intermission. Nembhard and Jackson scored eight points apiece in the third quarter for Indiana, which entered the final quarter with an 86-80 lead.

After the Pacers missed nine of their first 10 shots to begin the fourth quarter, Chicago took its first second-half lead at 90-88 on Jones’ jumper with 6:32 left. Chicago led 97-90 with 4:51 left before the Pacers scored eight straight to regain the lead at 98-97 with 2:19 remaining. Reuters

LeBron happy to play third fiddle

Conventional wisdom predicted the early weeks of the Lakers’ new partnership would be messy, and with reason. After all, ball-dominant playmakers with a distinct cadence rarely just snap into rhythm alongside each other. In fact, the annals of pro hoops are littered with examples of failed attempts at turning the luster of individuals into collective success. Yet, lo and behold, the purple and gold are happily dancing in tune. And if they’re second in the highly competitive West on the strength of six straight victories (and counting), it’s because all-time-great LeBron James has sidestepped the usual complications.

Indeed, James has settled next to Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves with veteran ease. For all his accomplishments through a whopping 22-plus years in the National Basketball Association (NBA), he has fit in seamlessly by subjugating his ego and buying into the Lakers’ process without question. The spacing and tempo work, and the hierarchy (invariably the trickiest to navigate when dealing with marquee names) has taken shape without any apparent friction. It helps, of course, that he has mastered the art of reducing a system to its essentials.

Doncic still sets the table, to be sure, and in a way only he can; his methodical, probing, unhurried style may be predictable by now, but it has been no less deadly. And in the periphery is an extremely comfortable James, content to be third in the pecking order behind even Reaves to stitch possessions. When the others bend the defense, the 21-time All-NBA selection drifts into the space behind it and gleefully turns would-be resets into clean looks or quick dives.

From the outside looking in, the give-and-take looks and feels organic, almost understated, but it has already reshaped the Lakers’ identity. At least two of the Big Three will be on the court at any given time to ensure competitiveness sans exhaustion. And there will be no hijacking of sets, not with James providing direction and getting touches only in the flow of proceedings. Thus far, he has relished being a pressure valve when defenses overcommit, with his secondary playmaking buying Doncic and Reaves pockets of rest.

Needless to say, much of the credit belongs to the Lakers’ coaching staff for constructing an offense that has rarely stagnated. Possessions begin with Luka’s gravity, flow through Reaves’ precision, and end with James choosing the most viable solution. Theirs is a rhythm built on trust, and trust built on clearly established roles that make sense based on their singular skill sets. And what stands out most is how little self-importance has entered the picture, which, by the way, should not be mistaken for absence of ambition. To the contrary, they know they’re justified in casting eyes on the hardware.

Where the Lakers will ultimately wind up is anybody’s guess. Integrations often begin gracefully and end in compromise. That said, their alliance boasts of coherence that projects staying power; thus far, they have displayed the type that figures to hold even when the schedule stiffens and the scouting reports sharpen. James doesn’t have to dominate; he merely guides. Doncic doesn’t have to carry; he merely creates. Reaves doesn’t have to control; he merely crafts. Together, they have been the best versions of themselves.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Anger simmers over Hong Kong deadly blaze as Beijing warns against ‘disruption’ attempts

A DRONE view shows flames and thick smoke rising from the Wang Fuk Court housing estate during a major fire in Tai Po, Hong Kong, China, Nov. 27. — REUTERS/TYRONE SIU

HONG KONG — Anger over a deadly blaze at a Hong Kong high-rise apartment complex simmered on Sunday as Beijing warned against attempts to use the disaster to disrupt the city, while people across the financial hub continued to mourn for the more than 128 victims.

Police on Saturday detained one person who was part of a group that launched a petition demanding government accountability, an independent probe into possible corruption, proper resettlement for residents, and a review of construction oversight, two sources familiar with the matter said.

University student Miles Kwan, 24, was arrested on suspicion of trying to incite sedition in relation to the blaze in the Wang Fuk Court complex in the northern Tai Po district, the South China Morning Post reported. Hong Kong police did not respond on Sunday to a request for comment.

The online petition promoted by the group reached over 10,000 signatures by Saturday afternoon before it was closed.

A second petition with the same demands has been launched by a Tai Po resident who is now living overseas.

“Hongkongers demand the truth and justice,” wrote KY in the comment section of the new online petition.

The blaze that ripped through seven high-rise residential blocks near the border with mainland China has stunned Hong Kong and authorities have launched criminal and corruption investigations as anger and dismay grow.

The cause of the blaze, which killed 128 people and left 150 still missing, is still to be determined.

Authorities are on tenterhooks to avoid any broader public backlash after pro-democracy protests roiled the city in 2019, leading to a Beijing-imposed national security law.

China’s national security authorities on Saturday warned individuals against using the disaster to disrupt the city.

“We sternly warn the anti-China disruptors who attempt to ‘disrupt Hong Kong through disaster.’ No matter what methods you use, you will certainly be held accountable and strictly punished under the Hong Kong national security law and the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance.”

FIRE ALARMS NOT WORKING PROPERLY
Authorities have arrested 11 people in connection with the city’s worst blaze in nearly 80 years as they investigate possible corruption and the use of unsafe materials during renovations at the Wang Fuk Court complex.

Rescue operations at the site concluded on Friday, though police say they may find more bodies as they comb through the hazardous, burnt-out buildings in coming weeks.

Hundreds of officers deployed to search for remains found no further bodies but rescued three cats and a turtle, police officials told a press conference.

The fire started on Wednesday afternoon and rapidly engulfed seven of the eight 32-story blocks at the complex that were wrapped in bamboo scaffolding and green mesh and layered with foam insulation for the renovations.

Donations have poured in from large and small companies as well as other groups to assist the victims.

Authorities have said the fire alarms at the Wang Fuk Court estate, home to over 4,600 people, had not been working properly.

The fire is Hong Kong’s deadliest since 1948, when 176 people died in a warehouse blaze.

Residents of Wang Fuk Court were told by authorities last year they faced “relatively low fire risks” after complaining about fire hazards posed by the renovation, the city’s Labor Department said.

The residents raised concerns in September 2024, including about the potential flammability of the protective green mesh contractors used to cover the bamboo scaffolding, a department spokesperson said. — Reuters

Australia climate change protest disrupts shipping at coal port; 21 arrested

REUTERS

A CLIMATE CHANGE PROTEST off Australia’s east coast on Sunday disrupted operations at one of the country’s biggest coal export ports, prompting 21 arrests, the second protest in two days to disrupt shipping at the Port of Newcastle.

Climate activist group Rising Tide, which claimed responsibility for the action, said hundreds of activists in kayaks paddled into the shipping lane of Newcastle Harbor on Sunday morning local time.

The port, 170 kilometers (110 miles) north of the state capital Sydney, is the largest bulk shipping port on the east coast of Australia, a nation where climate change is a divisive issue.

“General cargo movements are now being aborted due to the protester disruption,” a Port of Newcastle spokesperson said, adding that movements of alumina bound for Australia’s largest aluminum smelter, Tomago, were “now being interrupted.”

A coal ship was earlier denied entry to the port on safety concerns due to protesters in the water, the spokesperson said.

Police said in a statement that 21 people were arrested and charged on Sunday with “alleged marine-related offences” at the protest.

Greenpeace Australia Pacific said three of its activists climbed onto a coal ship near the port, stopping it from operating, as part of the “peaceful protest.”

“Greenpeace, alongside Rising Tide and thousands of everyday people, are taking actions big and small this weekend,” Greenpeace Australia Pacific head of climate and energy Joe Rafalowicz said in a statement.

On Saturday, a protest at Newcastle forced an inbound ship to turn back, and police made 11 arrests. A similar multi-day climate action occurred last year in which 170 protesters were arrested.

Coal is one of Australia’s top commodity exports, along with iron ore. Australia’s government has committed to reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. — Reuters

UK plans justice overhaul, to prioritize victims by cutting court delays

REUTERS

LONDON — Britain’s government is set to propose a criminal justice system overhaul next week aimed at cutting a backlog of nearly 80,000 cases that has left thousands waiting years for justice.

The Labor government, which has warned the number of cases waiting to be heard could rise to 100,000 by 2028 without action, said the reforms would take forward recommendations from a review conducted earlier this year.

Justice Secretary David Lammy’s office said in a statement on Sunday that he would outline proposals to modernize courts and speed up cases to put victims “front and center.”

“Behind every one of the thousands of cases waiting to go to trial is a human life put on hold,” Mr. Lammy said, adding: “For many victims, justice delayed is justice denied.”

Some hearings are listed as far ahead as 2030, and figures show more than a quarter of cases wait a year or longer, with many victims abandoning proceedings. In rape cases, 60% of complainants withdraw before trial.

The recommendations suggested creating a new division for mid-level offences, limiting jury trials for minor cases, and allowing judge-only trials for complex fraud.

Legal groups have warned against restricting jury trials, which they say is a fundamental right. — Reuters

Pope Leo taking peace message to Lebanon, target of Israeli strikes

Pope Leo XIV leads the Angelus prayer on his 70th birthday, from the window of the Apostolic Palace at the Vatican, Sept. 14, 2025. REUTERS/Vincenzo Livieri

ISTANBUL — Pope Leo travels to Lebanon on Sunday, where he is expected to appeal for peace in a country that is a continued target of Israeli air strikes, on the second and final leg of his first overseas trip as leader of the Catholic Church.

The first US pope will arrive from Turkey, where he has been visiting for four days and warned that humanity’s future was at risk because of the world’s unusual number of bloody conflicts and condemned violence in the name of religion.

Leo is due to land at Beirut’s Hariri International Airport at 3:45 p.m. (1345 GMT), ahead of meetings with the president and prime minister and an address to national leaders, the pope’s second to a foreign government.

Lebanon, which has the largest share of Christians in the Middle East, has been rocked by the spillover of the Gaza conflict, as Israel and the Lebanese Shi’ite Muslim militant group Hezbollah went to war, culminating in a devastating Israeli offensive.

Leaders in Lebanon, which hosts 1 million Syrian and Palestinian refugees and is also struggling to recover from years of economic crisis, are worried Israel will dramatically escalate its strikes in coming months.

Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem said on Friday that he hoped Leo’s visit would help bring an end to Israeli attacks.

Lebanon’s diverse communities have also welcomed the papal trip, with leading Druze cleric Sheikh Sami Abi al-Muna saying Lebanon “needs the glimmer of hope represented by this visit.”

POPE VISITING FIVE LEBANESE CITIES AND TOWNS
Leo, a relative unknown on the world stage before becoming pope in May, is being closely watched as he makes his first speeches overseas and interacts for the first time with people outside mainly Catholic Italy.

On Saturday, Leo visited Istanbul’s famed Blue Mosque, in his first visit as pope to a Muslim place of worship. He removed his shoes in a sign of respect but did not pray at the mosque as planned, which appeared to surprise Vatican officials.

The pope, 70 and in good health, has a crowded itinerary in Lebanon, visiting five cities and towns from Sunday to Tuesday, when he returns to Rome. Leo will not travel to the south, the target of Israeli strikes.

His schedule includes a prayer at the site of a 2020 chemical explosion at the Beirut Port that killed 200 people and caused billions of dollars’ worth of damage.

He will also lead an outdoor Mass on the Beirut waterfront and visit a psychiatric hospital, one of the few mental health facilities in Lebanon, where carers and residents are eagerly anticipating his arrival. — Reuters

Global airlines race to fix Airbus jets; US reports little disruption

An EasyJet airline’s Airbus A320-214 passenger aircraft, coming from Glasgow, lands at Malaga-Costa del Sol Airport in Malaga, Spain, June 29, 2024. — REUTERS/JON NAZCA

TOKYO/NEW DELHI/PARIS — Global airlines scrambled to fix a software glitch on Airbus A320 jets on Saturday as a partial recall by the European planemaker halted hundreds of flights in Asia and Europe and threatened US travel over the busiest weekend of the year.

Airlines worked through the night after global regulators told them to remedy the problem before resuming flights.

Airlines that said they had completed or nearly finished all their software updates on Saturday included American Airlines, United Airlines, Air India, Delta Air Lines, Hungary’s Wizz Air, Mexico’s Volaris, Air Arabia, Saudi Arabia’s Flyadeal, and Taiwan’s carriers. Many reported no impact on operations.

The overnight effort by airlines appeared to help head off the worst-case scenario and capped the number of flight delays in Asia and Europe. In the United States, which will face high demand after the Thanksgiving holiday period, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said that impacted US carriers “have reported great progress, and are on track to meet the deadline of this Sunday at midnight to complete the work.”

He posted on X that travelers “SHOULD NOT expect any major disruptions,” although one US airline, JetBlue, later said it cancelled dozens of flights that had been scheduled for Sunday.

Asia-based aviation analyst Brendan Sobie said the update was “not as chaotic as some people might think,” although “it does create some short-term headaches for operations.”

Airbus Chief Executive Officer Guillaume Faury apologized to airlines and passengers after the surprise recall of 6,000 planes, or more than half of the global A320-family fleet, which recently overtook the Boeing 737 as the industry’s most-delivered model.

“I want to sincerely apologize to our airline customers and passengers who are impacted now,” Mr. Faury posted on LinkedIn.

Friday’s alert followed an unintended loss of altitude on an Oct. 30 JetBlue flight from Cancun, Mexico, to Newark, New Jersey, which injured 10 passengers, according to France’s BEA accident agency, which is probing the incident.

AIRBUS RECALL LUCKY TIMING FOR SOME AIRLINES
The alert landed at a time of day when many European airlines and Asian airlines are winding down their schedules, leaving time for repairs. In the United States, however, it came during the day ahead of the busy Thanksgiving holiday travel weekend.

US carrier JetBlue said it cancelled about 70 flights that were scheduled for Sunday, with more cancellations possible. JetBlue expects to finish software updates for 120 planes by Sunday morning, but said fixes for about 30 aircraft would still be “in progress” at that point.

About 140 jets in the company’s fleet of A320, A321 and A220 aircraft did not need the fix, the company said.

American Airlines, the world’s largest A320 operator, said 209 of its 480 jets needed the fix, below initial estimates, most of which it expected to complete by Saturday. United Airlines told Reuters on Saturday that all its aircraft had been updated.

AirAsia, one of the world’s largest A320 customers, said it aimed to complete fixes in 48 hours. India’s aviation regulator said on Saturday that carriers IndiGo and Air India were expected to complete the process on Saturday. ANA Holdings cancelled 95 flights on Saturday, affecting 13,500 travelers.

Taiwan’s low-cost airline Tigerair said eight flights would be delayed on Sunday due to the software issue.

Airlines must revert to a previous version of software in a computer that helps determine the nose angle of the affected jets and in some cases must also change the hardware itself, mainly on older planes in service. The fix must be completed before the planes can fly again with passengers, a process needing two to three hours per jet.

Globally, there are about 11,300 of the single-aisle jets in service, including 6,440 of the core A320 model. Those include some of the largest and busiest low-cost carriers.

Tracker data from Cirium and FlightAware showed most global airports operating with good-to-moderate levels of delays.

By Saturday, Airbus was telling airlines that repairs to some of the A320 jets affected may be less burdensome than first thought, industry sources said, with fewer than the original estimate of 1,000 needing the time-consuming hardware changes.

There were also unresolved questions about the impact of solar flare radiation blamed for the JetBlue incident, which is being treated by French investigators as an “incident,” the lowest of three categories of potential safety emergency.

“Any operational challenges that come at short notice and affecting a large part of your operation is tough to deal with,” said UK-based aviation consultant John Strickland. — Reuters

China factory activity slumps for longest stretch on record

A worker on the production line for kitchen utensils at a factory near Zhuhai, China. — BLOOMBERG/QILAI SHEN

CHINA’S factory activity improved but remained in contraction in November, extending its streak of declines to a record as the country’s economic slowdown deepens.

The official manufacturing purchasing managers’ index was 49.2, remaining below the 50 mark that separates growth and contraction for an eighth month. The median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg was 49.4.

The non-manufacturing measure of activity in construction and services reached 49.5, after inching up to 50.1 in October, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Sunday. It was the first contraction for the index in nearly three years, driven by weakness in the real estate and residential services sectors.

The readings offer an early glimpse of how the world’s second-biggest economy fared in November, after months of global trade turbulence and an unprecedented decline in investment. So far this quarter, industrial production had its smallest gain since the start of the year, while exports unexpectedly contracted, as global demand failed to offset the slump in shipments to the US.

But tensions with the US have eased after a temporary truce last month following a meeting in South Korea between Presidents Donald J. Trump and Xi Jinping. Key details of the deal, including questions over Chinese shipments of rare earths, are still being negotiated, underscoring the fragility of the agreement.

A diplomatic spat with Japan in recent weeks has added to trade uncertainty, however, as China contemplates economic countermeasures.

Beyond geopolitical risks, weak domestic demand is still casting a pall over the outlook for Chinese factories. Growth in retail sales slowed for the fifth straight month in October, the longest such streak since the country shuttered shops because of the Covid pandemic more than four years ago.

The recent downswing in the economy doesn’t mean that additional stimulus measures are on the table. Chinese policymakers are in no rush to act now that their annual growth target of around 5% for this year looks to be within reach.

China already injected additional stimulus worth 1 trillion yuan ($141 billion) since late September, including unused bond quota for provinces to expand investment and repay arrears owed to companies, as well as new funding for policy banks to spur investment.

Looking at the next five years, Beijing has made clear it plans to keep tech and manufacturing as the top priorities even as it pledged to “significantly” boost the share of consumption in its economy. Net exports contributed nearly a third of China’s growth this year.

China’s economic growth decelerated last quarter to the slowest pace in a year. Analysts see a further slowdown, forecasting the weakest this quarter since the final three months of 2022, when the nation was nearing the end of its Covid Zero lockdowns. — Bloomberg

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