Zimbabwean millennial Kirsty Coventry gets Olympic top job
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa—Zimbabwean Olympic swimmer Kirsty Coventry has had an eventful career, from the pool, to parliament.
The country’s former dictator, Robert Mugabe, called her “a golden girl,” while the man who deposed him in a coup — Emmerson “the Crocodile” Mnangagwa – appointed her his minister of sports.
Now the 41-year-old is taking on a whole new role, after being voted in on Thursday as the first female — and first African — president of the International Olympic Committee [IOC]. She’s also the youngest.
“The young girl who first started swimming in Zimbabwe all those years ago could never have dreamt of this moment,” she said after winning a majority 49 of 97 votes, and beating six men to the post. “Glass ceilings have been shattered today.”
Coventry was born in a newly-independent Zimbabwe in 1983, just years after a liberation war that saw the end of white-minority rule in what had once been Rhodesia.
She was a swimming star from an early age, competing in her first Olympics in 2000 when she was still at high school. But it was in the 2004 and 2008 Games where she really excelled, winning the Gold both times in the 200-meter backstroke.

She was popular with Zimbabweans of all races for winning the country a total of seven medals before she retired in 2016.
However she has faced some criticism for participating in Mnangagwa’s government, which has been accused of rights abuses and which held a disputed election in 2023.
There has also been controversy around Coventry’s stance on transgender athletes. She has said transgender women have an unfair advantage and has backed a blanket ban on them competing in women’s Olympic sports.
That might smooth her relations with the president of the next country set to hold a summer Olympics: the US. Los Angeles will host the 2028 Games, and President Donald Trump has been a vocal opponent of transgender women in sport.
But there are worries for the next Olympics at a time of increasing global polarization.
Asked by journalists Thursday if she was concerned about dealing with Trump, if for example he tried to ban athletes from certain countries, the Zimbabwean was blasé.
“I have been dealing with, let’s say, difficult men in high positions since I was 20 years old,” she quipped.
Comedian Russell Brand is charged with rape and assault in U.K.
The criminal charges were announced one and a half years after Brand was accused of sexual misconduct by four women in the fall of 2023.
The job market remains incredibly healthy — but the tariff storm could upend things
Employers added 228,000 jobs in March, showcasing a solid labor market. But uncertainty over tariffs and tepid consumer spending may weigh on job growth in the months to come.
Trade war escalates as China hits back with 34% tariffs on all U.S. goods
Analysts say the escalating trade tensions between the U.S and China will make a near-term deal to end the trade war "highly unlikely".
Gambling proposal likely dead for the legislative session
If there's any topic that hovers over the Alabama legislature, never quite going away, it's gambling. The perennial issue has always fallen short and it looks like it will do so again this year.
The unique genetic change that turned horses into athletic powerhouses
A new study suggests genetic changes allow horses to produce more energy, while minimizing the toll the energy takes on cells.
Word of the Week: The swashbuckling origins and evolution of ‘filibuster’
Sen. Cory Booker's record-breaking Senate speech wasn't technically a filibuster, but it still put the word in focus. Here's what to know about its history, from the swashbuckling to the stonewalling.