World
‘I’m a sworn virgin – I’ve rejected 15 marriage proposals and men are scared of me’ | World | News

Burrnesha Duni was demanding £200 to speak to us. Having travelled to Lepusha, a tiny outpost high in the mountains of northern Albania, she knew the Express team was out on a limb. “You can just go back,” Duni, dressed in a grey tracksuit and walking boots, told us with a flick of the hands. “It doesn’t matter to me.”
It wasn’t just that she lived at the end of a rubble path it had taken a 4×4 three attempts to scale, Duni knows how unique her story is. We wanted to speak to her because she is the last of a kind.
About 35 years ago Duni decided to follow an ancient Balkan tradition and become a sworn virgin, or ‘Burrnesha’ as Albanians say. This meant, as well as a vow of celibacy, she committed to “live as a man”.
Duni, now 58, embraced the role, cutting her hair short and wearing men’s clothes. Characterising herself as tough and strong, as her approach to negotiations suggests, she spends her days in a mountain chalet with only a vicious-looking Alsatian for company.
A keen football fan, the sworn virgin loves watching the Italian national team, so much so that she once kept her nephew locked out of the house for two hours after an argument sparked by his loyalty to the England side.
Being a Burrnesha also allowed her, in the past, to adopt the role of breadwinner and head of the household, which were the main reasons for her taking the vow.
“When my father passed away my brother and sister were young,” she explained. “At that time a girl or a woman was always someone who is serving. So I had two options; to serve to the family of a husband or to [become a sworn virgin and] serve my own family.”
Not that it was an easy time for Duni to support her siblings. Albania was in the last throws of communism which meant the sworn virgin spent days toiling on the collectivist farm for little reward.
But even Duni will concede, by the standards of the rural mountain town, her vow of chastity, aged 23, came rather late.
In fact, prior to choosing to live as a man, she turned down 15 marriage proposals.
“I had a lot of options,” Duni continued. “But I wanted to be free and feel different. I had the opportunity because my father was very educated and open-minded [so I was able to remain unmarried]. I’ve said to all my brothers and sisters ‘don’t get married too quickly. Enjoy your life’.”
Being a sworn virgin was clearly to Duni’s taste. Once her siblings were grown her mother introduced another two suitors keen to marry her and she rejected them both.
This was despite not having any obligations and the difficult conditions of communism being a distant memory.
“In every village in Albania, especially in the Old North, it’s not that a guy comes in a house and says ‘do you want to marry me?’ it is the father who comes to speak only with the parents, not me directly,” she explained.
“I just said ‘no, no, no I don’t care who the guy is’. Different families came into our family house to convince me for their boys. I always said no, even during the good times of Albania after democracy, so I was always against that.”
Duni said she had no fear a persistent suitor would refuse to accept her decision. She had a reputation as someone not to be messed with. “I was very strong so most of the guys were scared for me, even today, they are scared of me,” she said.
Not that she thinks women today need to become a sworn virgin to live as she has.
“Women nowadays are so lucky because they can be independent and do whatever they want,” she added. “I am happy when I see a lady can be a lawyer, president or director.”
As someone who’d chosen to ‘live as a man’ long before the transgender debate exploded, Duni was non-plussed on the thought of women choosing to make permanent physical alterations to be more like a man.
She said: “I don’t want to judge them because everyone has their own body, but God made us man and woman and you can’t change that. I don’t like these things that are happening in England or all around the world, but they can do whatever they want.”
The interview having finished, Duni invites us for mid-morning coffee washed with a large glass of Raki – a local spirit which is 50 per cent alcohol. It turns out to be an unfortunate interruption because as we head to the chalet our cameraman loses his drone in the woods.
Several hours later the sworn virgin calls with good news; she’d found the drone. But we were mistaken if we thought it might be returned for free. Duni was clear; the price of its return was 24 cans of beer.
World
‘Realistic possibility’ Israel was behind Iran blast which killed 8 and injured 800 | World | News

Israel was probably behind the huge blast in Iran which killed eight people and injured 800. The explosion at Bandar Abbas occurred as the Islamic regime began a third round of nuclear talks with the United States in Oman. But its target is thought to have been a store of rocket fuel imported from China and bound for Yemen.
Authorities in Tehran moved quickly to deny any implication of sabotage, officially explaining that the accident was caused by a small fire which reached an “open container of chemicals”. Videos showed a huge billowing mushroom cloud, and the force of the blast destroyed a nearby building and shattered windows. Injured people lay on the roadside as authorities declared a state of emergency at hospitals across Bandar Abbas to cope with the influx of wounded.
However, early analysis suggests the explosion may have destroyed between 10,000 and 50,000 litres of liquid rocket fuel or related volatile propellants – a significant blow to Iran’s proxy supply chains.
Iran has increasingly relied on covert imports of rocket fuel components from China to bypass sanctions, with typical shipments delivering up to 20,000–25,000 litres per ISO tank container disguised as industrial chemicals.
Tel Aviv, for its part, has a history of targeting Iran’s rocket fuel facilities through suspected sabotage attacks. The most notable examples are the Khojir explosion of June 2020 and the Parchin site blast of May 2022.
Most analysts suspect the Khojir attack involved planting a shaped explosive charge inside or adjacent to a critical fuel storage or mixing facility, causing catastrophic secondary explosions. Both attacks were designed to resemble accidents, and both dealt major blows to Iran’s missile propellant capabilities.
Bandar Abbas serves as a key logistics hub for smuggling operations, including the type of liquid propellant used in Iranian ballistic missiles and larger drones sent to the regime’s last fully functioning proxy force – Ansar Allah, better known as the Houthi rebels.
Iranian security officials say “any speculation about the cause of the explosion is worthless”.
However, the regime’s silence may be a calculated attempt not to upset the United States, as Tehran seeks desperately needed sanctions relief through a new nuclear deal.
Donald Trump has already launched air strikes in Yemen in response to Houthi efforts to hold international shipping on the Red Sea to ransom, in protest against Israeli actions in Gaza.
Meanwhile, the US President is currently embroiled in a bitter trade war with China.
Israel, meanwhile, had become increasingly frustrated at the possibility that US-Iran talks could leave Tehran with a functioning nuclear infrastructure. It has, futhermore, been forced to refrain from launching direct air strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities by Trump, who has indicated he wants to wait until the talks are concluded.
Regional experts at the Sibylline strategic risk group said there was “a realistic possibility that the explosion is a result of sabotage by a state actor,” though they did not specify Israel by name.
“In case of Iranian authorities blaming Israel, the risk of Iranian covert attacks in the form of kinetic sabotage or cyber attacks against Israeli and Israeli-affiliated targets will increase in the coming weeks,” they said in a report on the incident.
“However, Iran is currently unlikely to openly target the US, to avoid a breakdown of nuclear talks and US strikes against it.”
World
Vancouver LIVE: ‘Bodies everywhere’ as car rams through crowd killing multiple people | World | News

Multiple people are dead after a car drove into a crowd in Vancouver, Canada, in the early hours of Sunday morning (BST). The incident occurred at a street festival in the city. Multiple others have been left injured.
Vancouver Police confirmed that a “number of people” have been killed and “multiple others” injured, adding that the driver, a 30-year-old man from Vancouver, has been detained.
Eyewitness Yoseb Vardeh, a food truck operator, said he heard “an engine rev” before looking down the road and seeing “bodies everywhere”. “He went through the whole block, he went straight down the middle,” he told Postmedia.
The Police statement said: “A number of people have been killed and multiple others are injured after a driver drove into a crowd at a street festival at E. 41st Avenue and Fraser shortly after 8 p.m. tonight.
“The driver is in custody.
“We will provide more information as the investigation unfolds.”
FOLLOW OUR LIVE BLOG BELOW FOR UPDATES.
World
Watch: Tourists seen racing for sunbeds dubbed ‘idiots’ in staggering video | World | News

There’s nothing quite as blissful as a sun-drenched getaway to get away from the hustle and bustle of modern life and simply relax. However, with everyone vying for a spot around the pool, it can often mean competing with other holidaymakers for the best place to sunbathe.
The war to grab a sunbed has become a growing issue over the years, with some turning to unusual and occasionally even bizarre methods to ensure they have their place for the day. Now popular travel TikToker @getlostwebsite has shared an eyebrow-raising clip showing tourists running to snare themselves an early sunbed for the day.
The video shows a quiet pool area at a hotel – but within seconds people are seen running to the sunbeds, with the ambience quickly quashed. It’s not clear which resort or country the hotel is located in.
The TikToker captioned the video “Look at them go!@arkbykomi #fyp #sunbedwars #holiday Tourists race for sunbeds”.
The video sparked a big reaction on social media.
One user said: “Please tell where this is so I know where NOT to go”.
Another added “how sad” and one called the people running to the sunbeds “idiots”.
Another user wrote: “Never again will I take a holiday like this in a hotel…Villa, no issues, own space”.
One user simply asked: “I just don’t get it. Why pay £££££ to sit around a pool all day?”
Sunbed wars have been raging across Europe over recent years, with many tourists competing for the best spots and seating arrangements at hotel pools.
Recently, a British tourist discussed her joy at finally enjoying a well-deserved holiday at a luxury five-star hotel in Egypt – apart from the sunbed issue.
Mrs May, who runs the Tiktok account @themrsmay, discussed how despite being on vacation, she has to set her alarm for 6:30am in order to get to the pool and bag herself a front row seat with the best sunbed.
Sadly, this behaviour has negatively impacted many holiday makers, with 66% of the British general public admitting they deal with sunbed anxiety each time they go abroad, according to data from Silentnight.
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