- Supreme Court allows Alabama to use congressional map favouring Republicans
- Libya’s national army conducts largest military exercise amid regional tensions
- Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi released from hospital after treatment
- Anthropic experiences major outage affecting Claude AI chatbot services
- Israeli strikes in Lebanon escalate as casualties rise amid ongoing conflict
- UK Athletics fined £350,000 after death of UAE Paralympian in practice accident
- DOJ announces it will not proceed with $1.8 billion anti-weaponisation fund
- Zelenskyy warns of potential Russian aerial attack amid missile shortage
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Supreme Court allows Alabama to use congressional map favouring Republicans
Get you up to speed: Supreme Court lets Alabama use House map that favors GOP in midterms
The Supreme Court has cleared the way for Alabama to use a congressional map favoured by Republicans, despite a lower court finding it intentionally discriminated against Black voters. This decision affects the state’s electoral landscape as Alabama prepares for its upcoming midterm elections.
The Supreme Court’s decision allows Alabama to implement the 2023 congressional map ahead of the special primary on August 11. Legal challenges from voting rights groups continue, with the district court maintaining that the 2023 map unlawfully discriminates against Black voters.
The Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision allows Alabama to proceed with a congressional map favouring Republicans, overriding a lower court’s finding of intentional discrimination against Black voters. Kristen Clarke of the NAACP has warned that the ruling could lead to a “chaotic election,” while Alabama plans to hold a special primary for affected House seats on 11 August.
What remains unclear — It is not specified how the Supreme Court’s decision will impact the voting process in the 2026 elections.
Supreme Court allows Alabama to use congressional map favouring Republicans
Washington — The Supreme Court on Tuesday cleared the way for Alabama to use a congressional map that is more favorable to Republicans in this year’s midterm elections, despite a lower court finding that the plan intentionally discriminated against Black voters.
In a divided 6-3 decision, the high court agreed to freeze the district court decision that prevented the state from using the map drawn by Republicans in 2023, which included one majority-Black congressional district out of Alabama’s seven. The lower court had found that Alabama intentionally discriminated against Black voters when it crafted those House district lines three years ago.
The lower court judges instead ordered the state to keep using a court-selected congressional map, which was in place for the 2024 elections, that includes two districts where Black voters have the opportunity to elect their preferred candidates. Under that map, the state’s seven-member congressional delegation is divided between five Republicans and two Democrats.
Now, under the 2023 plan that Alabama can swap in as a result of the Supreme Court’s order, which reconfigures the district currently represented by Democratic Rep. Shomari Figures, Republicans are likely to be favored 6-1. A special primary for four House seats altered by the 2023 map is set for Aug. 11. Primaries for the other three districts were held May 19.
In Tuesday’s unsigned opinion, the Supreme Court wrote that the lower court “interposed itself into Alabama’s ongoing efforts to conduct its imminent 2026 congressional elections under maps that its elected representatives selected. Its view that conducting the elections under court-imposed maps would be more convenient for the State was not a valid justification for that intervention.”
The high court said that Alabama was likely to prevail on its argument that the 2023 map is lawful.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor penned a dissent that was joined by the court’s two other liberal justices, arguing that setting aside the current congressional map — and reassigning many voters to new congressional districts — could lead to a “chaotic election, held under a never-before-used congressional map that intentionally discriminates against Black Alabamians.”
She said the court’s conservative majority “disregards both democratic values and the rule of law.”
Alabama GOP officials turned to the Supreme Court for emergency relief last week, after the district court’s decision finding the 2023 map unlawful because it purposefully discriminates based on race. They said that when drawing the district lines, mapmakers aimed to help Republicans and keep the Gulf Coast region together in one congressional district.
The Trump administration backed Alabama in its effort to put the congressional districts drawn in 2023 in place for the midterm elections, arguing that federal courts shouldn’t interfere with elections or usurp states’ role in drawing congressional districts.
But a group of voters and voting rights groups pushed back on Alabama’s assertion that it was seeking to achieve partisan goals when it drew the congressional map three years ago. In a filing with the Supreme Court, they said the legislature did not cite partisan goals at the time, and noted that the district court found “zero evidence” that mapmakers were motivated by party or incumbent protection.
“Granting Alabama’s request would insert the Court into an ongoing election in a manner that upsets settled expectations, causes voter confusion, and creates chaos and unworkable deadlines for even the most diligent election officials,” the voters, represented by the NAACP and the ACLU, said.
Kristen Clarke, general counsel of the NAACP, criticized the Supreme Court’s order, but encouraged Black voters to cast ballots in upcoming elections to express their dissent.
“The Supreme Court continues to unleash chaos in our democratic process, and with this latest action, gives Alabama approval to use a congressional map that had previously been found to be intentionally discriminatory,” she said in a statement. “This is a Court that is stripping Black voters of power and voice at a speed that would put Jim Crow jurists to shame.”
The legal battle involving Alabama’s voting boundaries posed an early test of the Supreme Court’s blockbuster decision in late April that weakened a key provision of the Voting Rights Act and invalidated a majority-Black congressional district in Louisiana. On the heels of that ruling, several states in the South, like Alabama, have moved to reconfigure House districts that have favored Democrats.
The high court’s decision came amid a separate push by President Trump for GOP-led states to redraw their congressional maps to bolster Republicans’ chances of holding onto their House majority in November, which set off a mid-decade redistricting battle.
Alabama has been involved in a protracted legal fight over its congressional boundaries that dates back to the redrawing of its House districts after the 2020 Census. After the Supreme Court ruled in 2023 that a congressional map adopted in 2021 — which included one majority-Black district — likely violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the state’s GOP-led legislature crafted a new map in the summer of 2023 that maintained a single majority-Black district.
But a district court blocked the state from using that map and found that it unlawfully diluted the votes of Black Alabamians. It ordered a special master to come up with a new plan, which was selected by the district court in October 2023 and used in the 2024 elections.
After the Supreme Court’s decision in the Louisiana voting rights case, Alabama asked the high court to lift the district court’s injunction and allow it to revive the 2023 map that had been blocked. The Supreme Court agreed to set aside the lower court’s decision and sent the case back for more proceedings.
When the three-judge district court panel took another look at the 2023 map, it maintained its earlier finding that the plan is racially discriminatory.
“Ultimately, we cannot see our way clear to requiring Alabamians to cast their votes in the 2026 elections under a districting plan tainted by intentional race-based discrimination,” Circuit Judge Stanley Marcus and District Judges Anna Manasco and Terry Moorer found.
Alabama Republican officials asked the Supreme Court to step in, arguing that the state’s 2023 map was “lawful then, and it is lawful now.”
Libya’s national army conducts largest military exercise amid regional tensions
Get you up to speed: ‘Message for friends and foes’: Libyan National Army conducts grand exercises
The Libyan National Army, led by Marshall Khalifa Haftar, is conducting its largest military exercise to date approximately 100 kilometres from Derna. Over 25,000 troops are involved in the two-week drills, which will culminate on May 19 and are intended to demonstrate the military’s capabilities and control over eastern and southern Libya.
The two-week military exercises conducted by the Libyan National Army are set to culminate on May 19, marking the anniversary of the LNA’s 2014 “Operation Dignity.” The exercises involve over 25,000 troops and a variety of military hardware, as the LNA aims to assert its control and safeguard the interests of all Libyans amid ongoing divisions within the country.
The Libyan National Army (LNA) is showcasing its military capabilities in a two-week exercise that culminates on May 19, with officials stating it aims to “safeguard the interests of all Libyans.” In a potential shift towards greater unity, the eastern and western authorities in Libya recently signed a US-mediated agreement to unify public spending, marking a significant political response to the ongoing division in the country.
What remains unclear — It is unclear how the unification of public spending will affect the ongoing power dynamics between Libya’s eastern and western authorities.
Libya’s national army conducts largest military exercise amid regional tensions
The Libyan National Army (LNA), commanded by Marshall Khalifa Haftar and controlling southern and eastern Libya, is conducting what officers describe as its biggest military exercise yet — and a message for both friends and foes.
At the entrance of a sprawling military encampment some 100 kilometers away from Derna, a towering portrait of Haftar overlooked the scene.
The sand whipped across a barren landscape as armored vehicles sped along.
The two-week exercises, which AFP journalists were permitted to observe during a visit over the weekend, will culminate on May 19 to mark the anniversary of the LNA’s 2014 “Operation Dignity” campaign against jihadist groups, including the Islamic State, in Benghazi.
The campaign allowed Haftar’s forces to wrest control over the east and ultimately parts of southern Libya.
Haftar, 82, and his sons — including Saddam, his heir apparent — will attend the display of firepower on May 19, along with foreign and Libyan officials.
The drills have deployed a panoply of military hardware — including tank formations and Russian-made Pantsir air-defense systems — with over 25,000 troops, said General Omar Mrajah Al Jedid, the officer overseeing the exercises.
General Abdallah Noureddine, another senior commander supervising operations near the village of El Ezzeiat, told AFP the manoeuvres were “a message for our friends and our foes.”
Several reports have said that the United States, through Trump’s senior adviser on Arab and African affairs Massad Boulos, is trying to promote a rapprochement between Libya’s eastern and western authorities, signalling a potential shift in power structures.
The legislative bodies of both authorities last month signed a US-mediated agreement to unify public spending across the divided country for the first time in over a decade.
‘ARMY FOR ALL LIBYANS’
Libya has remained fractured since chaos broke loose following the 2011 Arab Spring uprising that toppled longtime ruler Muammar Qaddafi.
The oil-rich country remains divided between a UN-recognized government based in its capital, Tripoli, and an eastern administration in Benghazi backed by Haftar.
Haftar’s forces attempted to seize Tripoli in 2019 but failed after a year of armed conflict. Since then, a change of tack appears to have taken place.
General Noureddine said the LNA has focused less on outright conquest and more on showcasing its control over the east and south of the country, all while “wishing the same for the rest of Libya.”
Human rights groups, however, have over the years accused forces linked to Haftar of arbitrary arrests, forced disappearances, and centralising power only within the Haftar clan.
General Al Jedid said the military drills would also demonstrate the army’s capacity to “safeguard the interests of all Libyans.”
The LNA is capable of “protecting the borders from all attacks,” he added, citing threats from “smugglers or terrorist groups currently moving through Mali, Niger and other countries in attempts to enter Libya.”
Responding to critiques on whether the force represents Libya as a whole, Al Jedid — himself from Tripoli and a former officer under Qaddafi — said the army did not serve only Haftar and eastern Libya.
“This is not a private army,” he said. “It’s not Marshall Haftar’s army, nor an army for the east, west or south. It’s the army of all Libyans, tribes and families.”
Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi released from hospital after treatment
Get you up to speed: Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi released from hospital
Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi has been released from a hospital in Tehran after over two weeks of care. Mohammadi, 54, had been transferred from prison to a hospital following an incident where she fell unconscious.
Narges Mohammadi was initially transferred from prison to a hospital in northwestern Iran on May 1 after losing consciousness. Prior to her release, specialists conducted examinations at the Tehran facility following her transfer from bail status.
Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi has been released from a hospital in Tehran, where she received medical care after her health deteriorated in prison. Supporters are urging that she remain at home for follow-up treatment and physiotherapy, while concerns about her ongoing health issues, including a history of serious medical conditions, persist.
What remains unclear — It is not specified what specific follow-up care and daily physiotherapy Mohammadi will require.
Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi released from hospital after treatment
Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi has been released from a hospital in Tehran after more than two weeks, her supporters said Monday.They called for Mohammadi, 54, to remain at home to receive follow-up care and daily physiotherapy.
Mohammadi was urgently transferred from prison to a hospital in northwestern Iran on May 1 after she fell unconscious. She was released on bail nearly 10 days later and transferred to the hospital in Tehran, where specialists examined her.
She was awarded the Nobel in 2023 while in prison and has been jailed repeatedly throughout her career. Her latest imprisonment began in December when she was arrested in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad.
Her family has said that her health had been deteriorating in prison, in part because she was heavily beaten during her arrest. She had a heart attack in March and has had a blood clot in her lung since before her imprisonment that needs blood thinners and monitoring to manage it.
Anthropic experiences major outage affecting Claude AI chatbot services
Get you up to speed: Anthropic’s Claude offline in major outage due to ‘capacity constraints’
Claude, Anthropic’s generative artificial intelligence chatbot, has gone offline due to a major outage affecting its global services. Users can log in but receive a message stating the service is unable to respond to queries.
Anthropic’s Claude remains non-responsive while the company is actively working on a fix for the outage, which has affected its global services. The firm, founded in 2021, recently filed a draft registration with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed initial public offering, but did not disclose the size or terms of the offering.
Anthropic confirmed it is aware of the outages affecting its generative AI chatbot, Claude, and is actively working on a solution. Following the outage, the company has submitted a draft registration to the US Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed initial public offering, although it has not disclosed the size or terms of the offering.
What remains unclear — Anthropic has not disclosed the size or terms of its proposed initial public offering.
Anthropic experiences major outage affecting Claude AI chatbot services
Claude, Anthropic’s generative artificial intelligence chatbot, has gone offline in a major outage affecting its global services.
Users can log in to the Claude interface, but the service does not respond to queries. Instead it returns a message saying: “A bit longer, thanks for your patience,” WTX News can confirm.
“Due to unexpected capacity constraints, Claude is unable to respond to your message. Please try again soon,” a further pop-up message, which appears after about three minutes, states.
San Francisco-based Anthropic said it was aware of the issue and is working on a fix.
Anthropic, founded in 2021 by former OpenAI employees, has established itself as a dominant player in the AI sector through its coding models.
The company reported an annualised revenue of $47 billion from selling its technology to people and companies using Claude.
On Monday, Anthropic announced that it had filed for a proposed initial public offering.
The move will determine whether Wall Street investors will match the hype around the technology boom.
The company was valued at $380 billion in February. It said it had submitted its draft registration to the US Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed IPO of its common stock.
The move is one of a handful that could rewrite the history books for public listings.
Anthropic did not disclose the size or terms of its offering. The company last week said it had raised $65 billion in a Series H funding round that valued it at $965 billion.
Rival OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, is also preparing go public in the US in the coming weeks, Reuters reported.
Anthropic recently struck a deal with SpaceX for access to graphics processing unit capacity in its Colossus 1 and Colossus 2 AI supercomputers.
Israeli strikes in Lebanon escalate as casualties rise amid ongoing conflict
Get you up to speed: Deadly violence in Lebanon despite Trump intervention
Israeli strikes in Lebanon resulted in at least a dozen deaths on Tuesday amid ongoing attacks by Hezbollah on Israeli troops. The situation remains volatile, with multiple casualties reported in various locations including Marwaniyeh and Briqaa, despite claims of a mutual halt to hostilities.
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz stated that the military has no operational restrictions in Lebanon and may strike anywhere deemed necessary. Meanwhile, a new round of negotiations is ongoing in Washington between Lebanese and Israeli delegations aiming for a ceasefire, despite Netanyahu’s opposition to the talks. It is reported that Trump told Netanyahu to ‘get in line and stop warmongering in the middle east‘.
The Lebanese embassy in Washington stated that Hezbollah had confirmed a “mutual halt of attacks” following a conversation between Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, although ongoing strikes in southern Lebanon continue to undermine any ceasefire prospects. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz asserted that the military could operate without restrictions within Lebanon, highlighting that US support for Israel’s actions remains firm.
What remains unclear — It is uncertain whether the ongoing discussions between Lebanese and Israeli delegations in Washington will lead to an actual successful ceasefire or if Netanyahu will continue to break it.
Israeli strikes in Lebanon escalate as casualties rise amid ongoing conflict
Israeli strikes on Lebanon killed at least a dozen people on Tuesday as Hezbollah claimed new attacks on Israeli troops, foiling hopes that President Donald Trump had negotiated a retreat.
Strikes resumed in southern Lebanon despite a phone call between Mr Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in which the two leaders were said to have agreed that Hezbollah and the Israeli army would stop “shooting at each other”.
The Lebanese embassy in Washington said Hezbollah had confirmed a “mutual halt of attacks” after a call between Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
But there was little sign of any progress on the ground. A strike on Marwaniyeh killed six people and wounded four others. Two people were killed in a drone strike on their vehicle in Briqaa, and a Syrian man was killed in a strike near a hospital in the village of Toul.
In the Saida district, 40km south of Beirut, a man and his two children were killed as they were heading south from the children’s exam centre.
At least four people were killed and 127 others were wounded, including 39 healthcare staff, in an Israeli strike near Jabal Amel Hospital in Tyre on Monday, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry.
Two Lebanese soldiers were wounded in a strike on their vehicle in Nabatieh on Tuesday afternoon.
Hezbollah claimed four overnight attacks on Israeli tanks in the towns of Odaisseh, Al Balou and Al Bayyada.
The continued fighting in Lebanon has also emerged as a main obstacle to a wider US-Iran peace agreement. Top Iranian officials say the attacks constitute a breach of the broader ceasefire. The hint of an Israeli pause has also piled pressure on Mr Netanyahu at home.
After a deal had appeared close last week, Mr Rubiio on Tuesday said technical talks on nuclear issues could take months to finalise. He said Iran must commit to negotiating “severe and long-term” limitations on its nuclear programme as part of a long-term peace deal.
A new round of talks was taking place on Tuesday between Lebanese and Israeli delegations in Washington in an effort to reach a ceasefire between the two countries.
Hezbollah opposes the talks, which have so far failed to halt attacks on Lebanon. But Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said negotiations were “the least costly option for Lebanon and the Lebanese”. He added: “Our path through them will be the shortest to ending the occupation and the return of our people in the south to their cities and villages, the more all efforts are unified under the umbrella of the state.”
Panic as residents flee
In Tyre, the largest city in southern Lebanon, several strikes were reported, including one near Jabal Amel Hospital, which caused extensive damage to the medical centre on Monday evening. Four people were killed and 127 were wounded, according to a preliminary toll.
There were no reports of strikes on the capital Beirut. On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the Israeli military would strike “terrorist targets in the Dahieh district of Beirut” in response to Hezbollah’s “repeated and ongoing violations of the ceasefire in Lebanon”.
Israeli military spokesman Lt Col Avichay Adraee then issued a forced displacement order for Dahieh, a Hezbollah stronghold south of Beirut. It prompted large numbers of residents to flee towards the centre of the capital, causing severe traffic congestion and widespread panic.
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said the military faced no restrictions on its operations in Lebanon and that the US would not prevent Israel from defending its northern communities. He adding that the military could strike “anywhere necessary” inside the country.
Mr Trump then called Mr Netanyahu in an effort to prevent the strikes, in what was described as “one of the worst calls since Mr Trump returned to office”, Axios reported, quoting a US official.
During the call, the US President reportedly called the Israeli leader “crazy” and accused him of ingratitude, saying he would “be in prison if it weren’t for me”, referring to his past public support during Mr Netanyahu’s corruption trial.
Lebanon was dragged into the war in early March after Hezbollah attacked Israel in solidarity with Iran. The Iranian leadership insists a broad peace deal with the US must also resolve the situation in Lebanon, making the fighting there a key sticking point in talks.
Speaking to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in his first testimony to politicians since January, Mr Rubio also said technical nuclear talks could take months to finalise. Under an initial understanding the US is pursuing with Iran, Tehran would agree to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Once that happens, a second phase of talks for a durable peace deal would start.
“Phase two is they [Iran] have to commit to very specific negotiations on [the] disposition of the highly enriched uranium that still is buried deep in a mountain somewhere,” Mr Rubio said. “They have to agree on negotiating severe and long-term limitations and, or, cancellation of enrichment in activity in the second phase of negotiations.”
He said such highly technical matters could not be worked out in a few days.“That would require a team of experts to meet over a 30, 60, 90-day period and work out the details, but they have to commit to their willingness to do that,” Mr Rubio said.
UK Athletics fined £350,000 after death of UAE Paralympian in practice accident
Get you up to speed: UK Athletics fined over ‘tragic and avoidable’ death of UAE Paralympian
A British court has fined UK Athletics £350,000 over the death of Abdullah Hayayei, a UAE Paralympian, whose practice cage collapsed on him at Newham Leisure Centre in East London on 11 July 2017. The court found that the cage was improperly assembled, leading to what was described as a “wholly avoidable” tragedy.
The investigation into the incident revealed that the throwing cage, donated to UK Athletics after the 2012 Olympics, had consistently been improperly secured during its use. The court noted that UK Athletics had previously acquired the cages following a collapse in 2012, highlighting ongoing safety concerns.
UK Athletics has been fined £350,000 for corporate manslaughter following the death of UAE Paralympian Abdullah Hayayei, who was killed by a collapsing practice cage. The organisation is set to pay this fine over six years while continuing to review safety protocols to prevent similar incidents in the future.
What remains unclear — It is not specified what additional measures, if any, UK Athletics will implement to prevent similar incidents in the future.
UK Athletics fined £350,000 after death of UAE Paralympian in practice accident
A British court has fined the country’s athletics body £350,000 ($471,600) over the “wholly avoidable” death of a UAE Paralympian who was killed when a practice cage collapsed on his head.
A father of five, Abdullah Hayayei, 36, was preparing to represent the UAE at the World Para Athletics Championships in London when the 440-pound metal structure fell on to him at Newham Leisure Centre, East London, on July 11, 2017.
The 5ft-high cage toppled over because it was put up incorrectly and without its base plate, in an “accident waiting to happen”.
UK Athletics pleaded guilty to corporate manslaughter and was fined £350,000 as well as £44,000 in costs, to be paid over six years.
The incident happened five years after UK Athletics had acquired two cages originally used in the 2012 Olympic Games. The cages had never been properly assembled with the base plates attached, the court heard. One collapsed in 2012, but no injuries were reported on that occasion.
Before the fatal incident, the cages had been used at five public events, including anniversary games in Stratford and at Swansea University Stadium.
“Over this period, very many athletes will have been within the cages and many more standing or passing close by,” said prosecutor John Price KC. “It was a perennial hazard, or to use a familiar phrase, an accident waiting to happen.”
Keith Davies, 79, who was head of sport for the 2017 World Para Athletics Championships, admitted a health and safety charge and was sentenced to a community order of 175 hours’ unpaid work.
At sentencing, Judge Richard Marks KC said the death of Mr Hayayei was “tragic, untimely and wholly avoidable”.
The judge noted failings by UK Athletics were not a “one off” but said any financial penalty would “weaken” its ability to support individual athletes and athletics in the community.
He told retired PE teacher Davies that he knew, or ought to have known, that base plates were an “integral part” of the cage construction.
Following the earlier collapse of an identical cage, he was “on notice”, and the judge said, “This was an accident which sooner or later was waiting to happen.”
His widow Badriah Hayayei gave an impact statement to the court on the fallout suffered by her and her five children.
“I hope the court takes a just stance against everyone who caused this because what happened was not just a simple mistake but the result of negligence, gross negligence, that could have been avoided if safety procedures adhered to.
“My husband went out to represent his country and raise the name of the UAE but he returned as a corpse because of this negligence.”
The court heard that Mr Hayayei, who had cerebral palsy, had been due to compete in the para athletics shot-put event at the World Para Athletics Championships in Stratford.
Detective Chief Inspector Lucie Card of Scotland Yard described Mr Hayayei as a “talented athlete” whose life “was cruelly cut short by the failings by those who were meant to keep him safe”.
Ms Card said the lead technician of the firm that had manufactured the throwing cage “knew within seconds” of seeing the scene that the equipment hadn’t been erected properly.
“Our investigation demonstrated that for years, the cage, which was donated to UK Athletics after the 2012 Olympics, wasn’t being properly secured by UK Athletics and its representatives,” she said.
“Establishing what failures caused Abdullah’s death has taken years of meticulous work by a committed team of detectives. It is no less than his family deserved.”
Mr Hayayei represented the UAE in the F34 class javelin and shot put at the2016 Rio Paralympic Gamesand was training for the World Para Athletics Championships at the time of his death.
He trained with the Armed Forces as a serviceman in 2001. He fought back from severe injuries suffered during an accident at that time that resulted in severe nerve damage and a disability he then had until his death.
He continued in the Armed Forces after he recovered and became an athlete, going on to represent his country.
When teammate Mohammed Al Hammadi won the UAE’s first medals – a silver and bronze – at the World Para Athletics Championships, he dedicated the medals to Mr Hayayei and gave them to his children.
Paying tribute to him at the time of his funeral, his elder sister Mariam Hayayei described him as a kind, helpful and fun person who took care of their mother after their father died in 1983.
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