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Lionel Messi: Argentina forward retires from international football

Argentina and Barcelona forward Lionel Messi retired from international duty after missing in a penalty shootout as Chile won the Copa America final.


"For me the national group is over. I've done everything I would, it be able to harms not to be a champion," the 29-year-old said. 

With Barcelona, Messi has won eight La Liga titles and four Champions Leagues. 

Be that as it may, his exclusive significant global honor is 2008 Olympic gold, with Argentina now having lost three noteworthy finals in three years. 

Argentina were beaten 1-0 in the 2014 World Cup last by Germany before two Copa America last thrashings by Chile on punishments. Messi was likewise on the losing side against Brazil in the 2007 Copa America last. 

"It's been four finals, it's not implied for me. I attempted. It was the thing I needed the most, yet I couldn't get it, so I thoroughly consider it's," he said. 

After Sunday's match completed 0-0 in 120 minutes, Chile won 4-2 on punishments. 


Messi's miss was Argentina's first endeavor in the shootout and it expanded over the bar after Sergio Romero had denied Chile's Arturo Vidal. 

Lucas Biglia additionally missed from 12 yards, with Chilean substitute Francisco Silva scoring the unequivocal spot-kick in the last in East Rutherford, New Jersey. 

Messi had scored five times at the competition, including a heavenly free-kick in the semi-last to end up his nation's record scorer with 55 objectives. 


For Barca he has scored 453 times in 531 recreations, including a La Liga record 312 objectives.

Brexit: David Cameron to quit after UK votes to leave EU

Prime Minister David Cameron is to step down by October after the UK voted to leave the European Union.

Talking outside 10 Downing Street, he said "new administration" was required. 

The PM had asked the nation to vote Remain however was vanquished by 52% to 48% regardless of London, Scotland and Northern Ireland backing staying in. 

UKIP pioneer Nigel Farage hailed it as the UK's "autonomy day", while Boris Johnson said the outcome would not signify "pulling up the drawbridge". 


Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said she was "totally decided" to keep Scotland in the EU so a second Scottish freedom submission was presently "profoundly likely".



 German chancellor Angela Merkel communicated "extraordinary misgiving" at the result, and EU boss said they anticipated that the UK would start transactions to leave "as quickly as time permits, however excruciating that procedure might be". 

Be that as it may, Boris Johnson, the ex-London leader and open face of Vote Leave who is presently a leader to be next executive, said there was "no requirement for flurry" about disjoining the UK's ties. 

He said voters had "sought in their souls" and the UK now had an "eminent open door" to pass its own laws, set its own particular assessments and control its own particular fringes. 

Another driving Leave campaigner, Labor's Gisela Stuart said the UK would be a "decent neighbor" when it exited the EU. 


The pound tumbled to its least level against the dollar since 1985 as the business sectors responded to the outcomes.






Flanked by his better half Samantha, Mr Cameron reported soon after 08:15 BST that he had educated the Queen of his choice to stay set up for the transient and to then hand over to another head administrator when of the Conservative gathering in October. 

He would endeavor to "relentless the boat" over the coming weeks and months, however that it would be for the new head administrator to do transactions with the EU and conjure Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, which would give the UK two years to arrange its withdrawal, he said. 


"The British individuals have voted to leave the European Union and their will must be regarded," said Mr Cameron. "The will of the British individuals is a direction that must be conveyed."








Area-by-area in maps: See how people voted

Bank of England representative Mark Carney said UK banks' "considerable capital and colossal liquidity" permitted them to keep on lending to organizations and family units. 

The Bank of England is prepared to give an additional £250bn of bolster, he included. 

Chancellor George Osborne said he had informed G7 fund pastors about the outcomes of the vote. 

On Twitter, he said it had been a "hard battled crusade" keeping in mind it was not the result he needed, "I will do everything I can to make it work". 

The choice turnout was 71.8% - with more than 30 million individuals voting - the most astounding turnout at an expansive vote subsequent to 1992. 


Mr Farage - who has crusaded for as far back as 20 years for Britain to leave the EU - told cheering supporters "this will be a triumph for normal individuals, for not too bad individuals".

Work pioneer Jeremy Corbyn, who required the UK to stay in the EU however was blamed for a tepid crusade, said poorer groups were "bolstered up" with cuts and felt "underestimated by progressive governments". 

"Unmistakably there are some exceptionally troublesome days ahead," he said, including that "there will be occupation outcomes as a consequence of this choice". 

He said the point he had made amid the crusade was that "there were great things" about the EU additionally "different things that had not been tended to legitimately". 

Lib Dem pioneer Tim Farron said Labor's pioneer had been "completely gutless" in the way he drew nearer the crusade. 

What's more, two Labor MPs have presented a movement of no trust in Mr Corbyn's administration which might be faced off regarding and voted on by Labor MPs one week from now. 






Mr Johnson and Mr Gove paid tribute to Mr Cameron as they tended to Vote Leave supporters in London close by Ms Stuart. 

Mr Johnson said the UK was "no less joined together... nor in fact any less European" after the choice to leave the EU. 


In the interim, at a public interview in Edinburgh, Ms Sturgeon said a second Scottish choice was "on the table" and that the Scottish government would get ready enactment to empower one.

The European Parliament is to hold a crisis session on Tuesday to examine the submission result. 

On Twitter, EU Parliament president Martin Schulz required an "expedient and clear leave transaction". 


Yet, Leave supporting Tory MP Liam Fox said voters had demonstrated extraordinary "mettle" by choosing to "change the course of history" for the UK and, he trusted, whatever remains of Europe.