Ebrima Cham, 35, killed in Hounslow flat in what police believe was a targeted attackA man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a 35-year-old was stabbed to death as he slept in what detectives believe was a targeted attack.Ebrima Cham, known as Brim, was attacked after three men broke in to his friend’s flat in Hounslow, west London, where he was staying. Continue reading...
Holders of ticket number 26590 win top prize in country’s bumper Christmas lotteryThe holders of ticket number 26590 struck it lucky in Spain when they won the top prize in the country’s bumper Christmas lottery.The top-prize-winning number, worth €400,000 (£341,000) fell out of the enormous metallic shuffling bins in a live televised event on Sunday morning. The winners won €20,000 for each euro spent on a €20 ticket. Continue reading...
Scar of Bethlehem designed to make people think about how Palestinians live in divided cityBanksy’s latest piece – the artist’s take on a nativity scene – has been unveiled at a hotel in Bethlehem.The Scar of Bethlehem features a nativity scene with Mary and Joseph and the baby Jesus, but instead of a star hanging over the crib there is what appears to be a large bullet hole piercing an imposing grey wall. Continue reading...
Australian PM Scott Morrison says government won’t change its climate change policy as New South Wales premier says ‘not much left’ of town of Balmoral
Scott Morrison’s press conference on the Australian fires was just more talking points and spin. The country needs more than wordsScott Morrison says this is not a time for division, or partisanship, or point scoring. He says we should unite in response to the current crisis. That’s certainly true. We have been.But prime minister, this is also time to stop pretending. Talking about Australia’s woefully inadequate climate policy at this time is not partisan, it is essential. And, with respect, the same same old talking points you rolled out on your return from Hawaii just don’t cut it anymore. Continue reading...
Police and protesters have clashed across India and six people died during standoffs on Friday in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, where tensions exploded between majority Hindus and minority Muslims.
Founding family criticises approval of £4bn deal despite national security concernsThe government has been accused of handing control away after it approved a US private equity firm’s £4bn takeover of the UK defence company Cobham despite national security concerns.The deal had been delayed since mid-2019 after fears were raised that Advent International’s acquisition could undermine the country’s security. Continue reading...
The Democratic congresswoman and the Labour MP swap stories of challenging presidents and PMs, Bollywood, and formative childhoodsThe wall outside Ilhan Omar’s office is not like that of other members of Congress. In Washington DC, a blank corridor of congressional offices gives way, outside the door to the office of the Democratic congresswoman from Minnesota, to a collage of cards, notes and handwritten posters offering variations on the slogan “We stand with Ilhanâ€. The 37-year-old, who was born in Mogadishu, Somalia, and spent four years in a refugee camp before fleeing with her family to the US, has for the last year been the target of vicious rightwing attacks, not least by President Trump. In July this year, he suggested she and three other women of colour – members of the so-called Squad of progressives newly elected to Congress – should “go back†to the “places from which they cameâ€. In some ways, Omar is the most visible of the four: she is the first person ever to wear a hijab in Congress.Tan Dhesi, Labour MP for Slough, understands the law of firsts: the 41-year-old is the first member of parliament to wear a turban and, like Omar, has a reputation for speaking out against anti-Muslim sentiment in government. In September, during prime minister’s questions, Dhesi called on Boris Johnson to apologise for his remarks about Muslim women looking like “letterboxes†which, to cheers from the chamber, he called “derogatory and racistâ€. Continue reading...
Downing Street event featured Johnson’s attempt to be funny, but with Dom surrounded by hacks it was easy to see where real power layUnder normal circumstances, it would be considered a huge breach of etiquette to let you know that yet again I have been overlooked in the New Year’s honours list before its publication. An astonishing omission, I agree, but there you are. But with the announcement of Nicky Morgan’s peerage, I feel that the rules have already been broken and I might as well come clean now. Because exactly when the once and present culture secretary first discovered she was going to be made a baroness is now a matter of some confusion. Continue reading...
Until four years ago Dar Es Salaam had no public transport. Artist Popa Matumula looks at the impact a new bus system is having on the city’s legendarily bad traffic Continue reading...
The program, introduced after the Christchurch massacre in March, has removed 56,000 guns from circulationNew Zealand’s ambitious firearm amnesty ends on Friday with questions over its success, as critics say the police only managed to collect about a third of the weapons that were outlawed after the Christchurch massacre.Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern banned semi-automatic weapons and launched a gun amnesty and buyback scheme earlier this year, after a March shooting in Christchurch where a man is accused of gunning down 51 Muslims in two mosques. Continue reading...
Average maximum reaches temperature of 41.9C or 107.4F on Wednesday – a full degree above previous mark set the day beforeAustralia recorded its hottest day on record on Wednesday, with an average maximum temperature of 41.9C (107.4F), beating the previous record by 1C that had been set only 24 hours earlier.Tuesday 16 December recorded an average of 40.9C across the continent, beating the previous record of 40.3C set on 7 January 2013. But it held the record for just 24 hours. Continue reading...
by Justin McCurry in Tokyo and agencies on (#4WQJF)
Civil court rules in favour of reporter, two years after she alleged a bureau chief date-raped herA Japanese woman whose rape accusations against a prominent TV journalist turned her into a symbol of the country’s fledgling #MeToo movement has been awarded 3.3m yen [$30,000] in damages.Shiori Ito went public in 2017 with allegations that Noriyuki Yamaguchi, a former Washington bureau chief for the TBS network with close ties to the prime minister, Shinzo Abe, had raped her two years earlier. Continue reading...
Edita Butkeviciute, 30, suffered injuries to her spine, legs and lungs in Aberdeen incidentA woman is slowly recovering after suffering a fractured spine when she was crushed by a sofa that fell from the roof of a building.Edita Butkeviciute, 30, is expected to be in hospital for the next three months after she suffered injuries to her spine, legs and lungs following the incident in Aberdeen city centre on 7 December. Doctors were initially unsure if she would walk again. Continue reading...
Official photos seem to show president using unsupported OS at Kremlin and residenceRussian agents have been accused of worldwide hacking operations, but someone at the Kremlin has apparently forgotten to inform Vladimir Putin of the importance of cyber security.Putin, 67, has the obsolete Microsoft Windows XP operating system installed on computers in his office at the Kremlin and at his official Novo-Ogaryovo residence near Moscow, according to images released by his press service. Continue reading...
Family started taking far more money out of firm after it was fined for misleading marketing of drugThe wealthy owners of OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma started taking far more money out of the company after it was fined for misleading marketing of the powerful prescription painkiller.Purdue made payments for the benefit of members of the Sackler family totalling $10.7bn (£8bn) from 2008 through to 2017, a court filing made by the company on Monday evening shows. Continue reading...
Chileans are gripped by uncertainty – suspended between hopes of progress, and frustration over an elusive political solutionWhen a tsunami of unrest spilled into Santiago’s fashionable Bellavista neighbourhood in October, Daniel Gajardo, 33, was torn between sympathy for the protesters and frustration at the harm they were doing his fledgling business.The recording studio and music shop he co-owns had been thriving, and moved to new premises just a day before the first major demonstration. Continue reading...
Former ruler, who no longer lives in country, was tried for imposing state of emergency in 2007A Pakistani court has sentenced the country’s former military ruler Pervez Musharraf to death on charges of high treason and subverting the constitution.Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup and later ruled as president, is not in Pakistan and was not available for comment on the sentence, handed down by an anti-terrorism court hearing the high treason case. Continue reading...
by Kate Proctor, Peter Walker and Daniel Boffey on (#4WND8)
Legal block on finalising deal after 2020 removes safety net below negotiations with EUBoris Johnson will attempt to mark his election promise to “get Brexit done†by writing into law that the UK will leave the EU in 2020 and will not extend the transition period.As MPs begin to be sworn in at Westminster on Tuesday, the prime minister’s team is working on amending the withdrawal agreement bill so that the transition, also known as the implementation period, must end on 31 December 2020 and there will be no request to the EU for a further extension. Continue reading...
Resettlement in the US has allowed some long-persecuted people to flourish, but that doesn’t let Australia off the hook“To freedom.â€Imran, a 25-year-old Rohingya refugee from Myanmar, raises a glass with a big smile. We are in a bustling restaurant on Chicago’s north side. This midwestern city seems a million miles from Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, or the tiny Pacific island nation of Nauru, yet it’s now home to several Rohingya men resettled under an agreement between Australia and the US. Continue reading...
There are choices to be made. Whatever the rhetoric, I’m willing to bet the UK remains in the single marketBrexit is “oven ready†and will be “done†on 31 January of next year. True enough. Except, of course, virtually nothing will actually change – except that we lose our voice and vote, and what remains of our influence on the future course of the EU. We’ll still be in the single market, free movement will continue, as will our financial contributions, and there will be no tariffs or customs checks, either between Dublin and Calais or in the Irish Sea. Instead, we will enter an uneasy interregnum, the so-called “transition†period – really a standstill period.Once again, we’re entering into a negotiation with a much larger and economically more powerful partner Continue reading...
Music can be a form of resistance – but an unstrung violin didn’t hold much promise. Then it was fixed, a plume of dust rose, and the fiddler began to playIt wasn’t a long journey, really, from East Jerusalem to Bethlehem in the central West Bank, but it went across ancient borders and boundaries and checkpoints. We were on our way, a group of five from the non-profit global exchange group Narrative 4, to the Aida refugee camp in the shadow of what the Israelis call the “separation barrier†and the Palestinians call the “apartheid wallâ€. Among our group was Colm Mac Con Iomaire, an Irish fiddle player, one of the finest musicians in the world.We abandoned the taxi at Checkpoint 300 and left Colm’s fiddle in the car, knowing that we were quicker on foot, but that the taxi would bring the fiddle along later: everywhere we went in Israel and Palestine, Colm would open up the eyelids of the day by playing a tune. Continue reading...
Player, who has 4 million followers on Chinese microblog Weibo, is called a ‘dirty ant’ for attacking ChinaChinese football fans have burned Arsenal football shirts and called on the club to fire star player Mesut Özil after he publicly criticised China’s treatment of Muslims in Xinjiang.On Friday, Özil, who is usually quiet on social media, posted a message on his Instagram profile describing Uighurs in the far north-western region of China as “warriors who resist persecutionâ€. Continue reading...
Soldiers wearing protective clothing and breathing equipment endured heat stress and threat of another eruption in high-risk operationA team of six New Zealand soldiers wearing breathing apparatus and special fire-retardant suits battled heat stress as they recovered six of the victims of the Whakaari/White Island volcano eruption, the military said on Friday.The Defence Force revealed that the painstaking operation consisted of three two-person teams deployed on the ash-strewn island at about 8am, backed up by medical staff on a police boat that also offered communications support. A helicopter hovered overhead, and HMNZS Wellington waited further offshore to receive the bodies. Continue reading...
Will the director’s latest effort, 6 Underground, a vigilante revenge thriller starring Ryan Reynolds, match the bombastic grandeur of the rest of his oeuvre? And which Transformers film was the least bad, anyway?You can tell that this was Michael Bay’s final Transformers film. It’s basically a compilation of every bad idea the man has ever had. There’s King Arthur. Stanley Tucci is Merlin. There’s a sexy Oxford professor called Viviane Wembley. It’s heavily implied that planet Earth was a great big Transformer all along. Everyone hated this film, even the idiots who went to see the other four. Continue reading...
Most EU nationals living in the UK cannot vote – leaving many feeling like pawns in a political gameIn a threadbare youth centre in Bradford, Vie Clerc, who got off a Eurostar from Paris 19 years ago with £50 in her pocket and never left, laments the irony. “It’s the first one I’ll actually be able to vote in,†she said. “Shame I’ve never felt less British.â€In a bright mezzanine office in Bristol, Denny Pencheva, who landed in 2013 from Bulgaria via Copenhagen and now teaches at the university, bemoans politicians “who use us to score their political points, but don’t actually have to consider us – because politically, we don’t countâ€. Continue reading...
Zelenskiy sitcom lasted just one night after alluding to Putin in crude sub-languageA Russian television channel has abruptly cancelled a sitcom starring Ukraine’s president after an allusion to a crude joke about Vladimir Putin was aired in Russia’s far east.The political satire Servant of the People served as a platform for the former comedian Volodymyr Zelenskiy to gain popularity and eventually win the Ukrainian presidency, in a vote largely driven by anger at the country’s previous leaders. Continue reading...
Paramilitary forces deployed at demonstrations in north-east over bill excluding MuslimsIndian police have fired blanks on protesters as thousands ignored a curfew in the north-east of the country in fresh demonstrations against contentious new citizenship legislation.Officials said on Thursday about 20 to 30 people have been hurt in the protests in recent days, with vehicles torched and police firing teargas and charging the crowds with heavy wooden sticks. Continue reading...
by El-Ghassim Wane, Abdul Mohammed and Alex de Waal on (#4WEWR)
If Washington wants to be on the right side of history, it must open the way for Sudan to receive economic supportOver the past year, the Sudanese people have staged a near miraculous revolution, overthrowing the 30-year dictatorship of President Omar al-Bashir.Following mediation led by the African Union and Ethiopia, a transitional government consisting of civilians and military generals is headed by Abdalla Hamdok, a veteran economist untainted by the decades of corruption and misrule. It is the best compromise: the army, and especially the paramilitary Rapid Support Force, are simply too powerful to be removed from politics in one fell swoop. Continue reading...
Gangland lawyer turned police informant says she has been forced to live overseas due to fear for her and her children’s safetyGangland lawyer turned police informer Nicola Gobbo says she has been “snookered by Victoria policeâ€, forced to live in an undisclosed overseas location because she fears for her and her children’s lives.Gobbo’s longest registration as police informer “Lawyer X†was from 2005 until 2009, when she turned on some of her most high-profile clients, including drug trafficker Tony Mokbel and underworld murderer Carl Williams. In July, Gobbo’s former client Faruk Orman was released from jail after a 12-year sentence when his criminal conviction was overturned, with Gobbo’s informing found to have led to a substantial miscarriage of justice. Continue reading...
‘The burns were horrific … A lot of the people could not talk,’ says Mark LawWhite Island volcano: police open inquiry as sixth person diesA commercial helicopter pilot who led a team that rescued 12 victims from the White Island volcano eruption has told how he believed he was their last hope of survival.“We found people dead, dying and alive but in various states of unconsciousness,†said Mark Law, a tour company boss who flew to the volcano and spent an hour on the ground even as a pillar of ash towered above them. Continue reading...
by Philip Oltermann in Berlin and Shaun Walker in Bud on (#4WBMA)
Politicians in Germany say claims from Russian leader are designed to muddy waters around murderVladimir Putin has claimed the Chechen separatist shot dead in Berlin in what prosecutors believe was a state-sanctioned assassination had been responsible for carrying out killings on Russian soil, frustrating German politicians who have sought clarification over the Kremlin’s involvement in the murder.At a joint press conference with the leaders of Germany, France and Ukraine at the end of a summit in Paris, Putin described the Georgian citizen Zelimkhan Khangoshvili as “a cruel and bloodthirsty person†whom Russian authorities had sought to have extradited from his exile in Germany. Continue reading...
As a doctors’ and nurses’ strike paralyses Zimbabwe’s health system, one woman has delivered 100 babies in her flat•Photographs by Cynthia R MatonhodzeSix expectant mothers groan through their labour pains in the lounge of a tiny two-roomed apartment in Mbare, Zimbabwe’s oldest township.Sweating and visibly in pain, a heavily pregnant woman peeps through the window to catch a breath while others lie on the floor. Continue reading...
by Charlotte Graham-McLay in Wellington and Eleanor A on (#4W9PP)
No survivors left on island, say police after disaster leaves up to two dozen people missingPolice in New Zealand have said they do not expect to find any more survivors from a volcanic eruption on White Island that killed at least five people and injured up to 20.“No signs of life have been seen at any point,†police said after rescue helicopters and other aircraft had carried out a number of aerial reconnaissance flights over the island following the eruption on Monday afternoon. “Police believe that anyone who could have been taken from the island alive was rescued at the time of the evacuation.†Continue reading...
Oil and gas explorer scraps dividend as more than £1bn is wiped off stock market valueShares in Tullow Oil more than halved after the company slashed its production forecast, scrapped its dividend and announced the departure of its chief executive and exploration director after problems at its fields in Ghana.The London-listed oil and gas explorer said the chief executive, Paul McDade, and the exploration director, Angus McCoss, had resigned by mutual agreement. The firm will be run by the chair, Dorothy Thompson, a former Drax boss, until a new chief executive is found, while Mark MacFarlane, its East Africa chief, becomes chief operating officer. Continue reading...
Anti-corruption inquiry hears Jamie Clements took trips for business and ‘entertainment’ when NSW Labor general secretaryFormer NSW Labor boss Jamie Clements travelled on a private plane organised on behalf of Chinese billionaire Huang Xiangmo when he was general secretary of the state party, an anti-corruption inquiry has heard.Huang’s former executive assistant Tim Xu told the Independent Commission Against Corruption that Clements used the plane for “probably meetings and sometimes entertainment, sometimes a tennis matchâ€. Continue reading...
Extreme fire danger warnings issued for three regions in Victoria, as NSW braces for temperatures above 40C on TuesdayEast Gippsland residents threatened by out-of-control bushfires were urged to leave their homes on Monday, with temperatures in parts of Victoria forecast to reach as high as 43CExtreme fire danger warnings issued for the Mallee district, while Wimmera and northern country were issued a severe warning. All three were under total fire bans. Continue reading...