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Updated 2024-11-25 10:00
New account pays 9% interest as UK savers offered highest rates for more than a decade
Building societies offer rates over 7% – but deals have strings attached and are limited to existing membersA new savings account has been launched that pays an inflation-beating 9% interest – hours after a rival institution unveiled an account paying 7.5%.The Bank of England’s 12 interest rate rises in a row have spelled pain for millions of people with existing mortgages and those looking to take one out, but the flipside is that savers are now being offered some of the highest rates for more than a decade. Continue reading...
Jordan’s crown prince cements status with glitzy wedding to Saudi architect
Celebrities and UK royals watch Prince Hussein marry Rajwa Alseif in marriage seen to secure succession and boost state tiesJordan’s monarchy has cemented the role of its 28-year-old crown prince with a wedding attended by global royalty, including Britain’s Prince and Princess of Wales, in a glittering show seeking to buttress the succession and move on from a painful family scandal.Crown Prince Hussein married Rajwa Alseif, a 29-year-old Saudi architect linked to her own country’s ruling dynasty, on Thursday afternoon in a match seen as boosting Amman’s rocky relationship with its more powerful and oil-rich neighbour. Continue reading...
Birmingham Six member Hugh Callaghan dies aged 93
Tribute paid to ‘values of forgiveness and gentle optimism’ of man wrongly jailed for 16 years over 1974 IRA atrocityHugh Callaghan, one of the Birmingham Six wrongly jailed for IRA bombings in 1974, has died aged 93.Callaghan died on 27 May after being admitted to Homerton hospital in London with chest pains, according to close friends. A passionate singer, he serenaded hospital staff almost until the end. Continue reading...
Ukrainian sanctions on media tycoon Alexander Lebedev revealed
The Russian businessman is the father of Evgeny Lebedev, who was given a peerage by Boris JohnsonUkraine has imposed sanctions on Alexander Lebedev – the former KGB intelligence officer whose son Evgeny sits in the House of Lords – in connection with Vladimir Putin’s invasion.The national security and defence council in Kyiv imposed sanctions on Lebedev Sr last October. The decision – first reported by Tortoise media – emerged on Thursday and follows a decree signed by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Continue reading...
Languages and creative arts losing favour with GCSE and A-level students
More vocational subjects such as computing and business preferred by those studying in EnglandLanguages and the creative arts are falling out of favour among GCSE and A-level students, who are increasingly opting for more vocational subjects such as computing and business studies.Provisional figures for England show exam entries for German have fallen by 17% for A-level students and 6% for GCSE studies, while Spanish and French have fallen 13% at A-level, although there has been a 5% increase for Spanish GCSEs, and French entries stayed at a similar level. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak ‘confident’ on Covid inquiry position as deadline to hand over Boris Johnson documents passes – UK politics live
If Cabinet Office has failed to comply with inquiry’s order to disclose the documents it could face legal battleMoldova’s president, Maia Sandu, and Britain’s prime minister, Rishi Sunak, greet each other at a welcome ceremony during a meeting of the European Political Community at Mimi Castle in Bulboaca, Moldova.Brexit will be remembered as a “historic economic error” that damaged the UK economy and has helped to drive inflation higher, according to the former US treasury secretary Larry Summers. Continue reading...
‘Rare talent’: Kiln artistic director stands down after 10 years
Indhu Rubasingham’s legacy includes rebrand of north London theatre and bringing culturally diverse voices to stageOne of the UK’s foremost artistic directors is standing down from the Kiln theatre after more than a decade of bringing politically and culturally diverse voices to the stage.Indhu Rubasingham has been the artistic director of the Kiln theatre in north London since 2012 and became the first woman of colour to run a big London theatre. Continue reading...
Ex-soldier becomes first person to swim from UK to Isle of Man
Adam Diver’s crossing turned into a gruelling 46-mile journey as he navigated tricky tides and jellyfishA former army captain has become the first person on record to swim between the UK mainland and the Isle of Man, in a gruelling 46-mile (74km) challenge navigating tricky tides and the near-constant attention of jellyfish.It was something of a “suffer fest”, said Adam Diver, 46, as he emerged shattered but smiling from the Irish Sea on Wednesday afternoon. Continue reading...
UK mortgage lending hits record low in sign of housing market stress
Bank of England data shows sharp dip in April as Nationwide says house prices falling at fastest annual rate since 2009
Burkina Faso is the world’s ‘most neglected crisis’ as focus remains on Ukraine
Chronic emergencies in Africa are being ignored while Ukraine dominates headlines and receives more funding, says NGOThe displacement of 2 million people in Burkina Faso has been named the world’s most neglected crisis, while the world’s attention and aid has been focused on Ukraine, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC).Burkina Faso has endured five years of conflict with militias – who have attacked water sources and forced school closures – now controlling up to 40% of the country’s territory. Continue reading...
England’s ‘free speech tsar’ named in announcement to one newspaper
Government accused of paying ‘lip service’ to free speech as Arif Ahmed is given higher education roleA Cambridge philosophy professor is to become the government’s first “free speech tsar” for higher education in England, it has been revealed, in an announcement made initially only to one newspaper – a move that led critics to accuse ministers of paying “lip service” to free speech.Arif Ahmed told the Times he hoped to use his role to stand up for “all views”, and that he did not seek to take part in any sort of culture war agenda. Continue reading...
CBI to lay off swathe of workers in attempt to cut wage bill by a third
Business lobby group says it must make ‘difficult decisions’ amid crisis prompted by sexual misconduct allegations
Father pleads guilty after baby killed by sled dog in Lincolnshire
Three-month old Kyra King sustained fatal injuries when husky escaped parents’ van at race eventA father has pleaded guilty to being in charge of a dangerously out of control dog, after his three-month-old daughter was fatally attacked by a husky last year.Vince King, 55, pleaded guilty to a charge relating to the death of his daughter, Kyra King, who sustained fatal head and neck injuries when she was mauled by his sled dog Blizzard. Continue reading...
Ex-BBC presenter who was jailed for stalking appears in court again
Alex Belfield is banned from contacting two more people after previous ‘campaign of abuse’ against broadcastersA former BBC local radio presenter who was jailed for stalking broadcasters including Jeremy Vine has appeared in court again as he was banned from contacting two more people.The YouTuber Alex Belfield, 43, was jailed for five and a half years in September 2022 for stalking Vine, a Channel 5 and BBC Radio 2 presenter, as well as the BBC presenters Bernie Keith, Stephanie Hirst, Liz Green, Helen Thomas and Rozina Breen after he was found guilty of pursuing a “campaign of abuse” against them. Continue reading...
Socialite Jasmine Hartin fined after killing Belize police officer
Ex-partner of Lord Ashcroft’s son discharged gun at Henry Jemmott in 2021 as the pair drank togetherThe Canadian socialite and former partner of the son of the billionaire and Conservative party grandee Michael Ashcroft has been fined after killing a police officer in Belize.Jasmine Hartin, 34, was ordered to pay £30,000 by the supreme court in Belize City for manslaughter by negligence. She must also undertake 300 hours of community service and film a video about the dangers of “drinking and making foolish decisions”. Continue reading...
Zimbabwe outlaws criticism of government before August elections
New law that criminalises ‘wilfully damaging’ country’s national interest raises fears of crackdown on dissentZimbabwe’s parliament has outlawed criticism of the government before presidential and parliamentary elections in August, with violations of a new law punishable by up to 20 years in jail.The criminal law code amendment bill, widely known as the “patriotic bill”, contains a clause that criminalises “wilfully damaging the sovereignty and national interest of Zimbabwe”. Continue reading...
Boy, 15, and man, 58, found dead with bullet wounds inside home in NSW town of Yamba
A crime scene has been established and will be examined but police do not believe a third party was involvedThe bodies of a 15-year-old boy and a 58-year-old man have been found inside a home in Yamba on the New South Wales north coast.Police were called to Kookaburra Circuit on Thursday afternoon after reports two bodies had been found. A 58-year-old man and a 15-year-old boy were found dead at the property, both with gunshot wounds. Continue reading...
Items found in Madeleine McCann search not confirmed as evidence – officials
Results of extensive search for clues about missing girl at a remote Portuguese reservoir ‘need to be evaluated’German prosecutors have said a number of items recovered in searches last week that may be linked to Madeleine McCann’s disappearance have not yet been confirmed as evidence.The searches, which took place in Portugal after requests from German investigators, involved a large section of the Barragem do Arade reservoir being cordoned off, in an area about 30 miles from Praia da Luz, where Madeleine went missing in 2007. Continue reading...
The Little Mermaid subjected to ‘review bombing’ with mass negative reactions posted by bots
IMDb has changed its rating system to mitigate trolling of the film, which has been a target of racism since the Black actor Halle Bailey was announced as ArielThe biggest film website in the world has said that the new, live action remake of The Little Mermaid has been the subject of “review bombing”, with mass negative reactions posted by bots to bring down the average review score.The Internet Movie Database (IMDb) said on Wednesday that the “unusual voting activity” it had detected on the reviews page for the film had led it to make changes to its rating system to mitigate unfair trolling. Continue reading...
Two-child limit on UK welfare benefits ‘has failed to push parents into jobs’
Exclusive: Policy misunderstands realities of caring roles and has left hundreds of thousands of families in poverty, study findsThe UK’s controversial two-child benefit limit, which restricts welfare payments to larger families to force parents to get a job, has failed to increase employment levels – but it has left hundreds of thousands of households in poverty, according to the first study of its kind.The government introduced the two-child limit in 2017, arguing that removing eligibility for benefits worth £3,000 a year per child for a family’s third and subsequent children would “incentivise” parents to move into work, or work more hours to make up the difference. Continue reading...
Ben Roberts-Smith loses defamation case, with judge finding former SAS soldier committed war crimes
Justice Anthony Besanko found newspapers established substantial or contextual truth of allegations of murders of unarmed civilians in Afghanistan
Boy and girl who died in Bournemouth were not hit by a vessel, police say
Officers continuing to investigate incident on beach in Dorset that left eight other people injuredPolice have confirmed that no vessel is believed to have been in physical contact with a 17-year-old boy and 12-year-old girl who died after getting into difficulty in the sea off Bournemouth beach.Dorset police received a report from paramedics at about 4.30pm on Wednesday of people requiring assistance on the beach near Bournemouth pier. Emergency services attended the scene and 10 people were recovered from the water. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 463 of the invasion
Three people including child killed in early morning missile attack on Kyiv; eight wounded in shelling of Belgorod region in Russia
The man who wasn’t there: Ben Roberts-Smith misses his day of reckoning
On the day a judge ruled the Victoria Cross winner had lost his defamation case and been proven to be a war criminal, Roberts-Smith didn’t turn up to court
Ben Roberts-Smith defamation loss bad news for Seven boss as Nine marks ‘day of justice’
Seven chairman Kerry Stokes, who parachuted the former soldier into a network job in 2015, says ‘the judgment does not accord with the man I know’For Seven’s chairman, Kerry Stokes, the verdict in the Ben Roberts-Smith defamation trial was all bad news.The cost of the trial is estimated to be between $25m and $35m and, with the billionaire media proprietor bankrolling the former soldier and Seven employee, Stokes’s legal tab will be significant if he does pick up the bill.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup Continue reading...
Labour suspends MP Geraint Davies over sexual harassment allegations
Long-serving MP who represents Swansea West faces investigation after claims from five women
Explosives equipment missing from massive Snowy Hydro work site
Worksafe NSW launches investigation as site staff told missing detonator and accelerant require other components to activate it
Ben Roberts-Smith verdict live: Kerry Stokes says defamation case finding ‘does not accord’ with man he knows – latest news
Justice Anthony Besanko has handed down his decision in the federal court in Sydney in the defamation trial brought by Australia’s most decorated living soldier – follow live updates and watch a replay of the live stream
Authorities to consider past Aboriginal mistreatment in child protection cases under newly passed Victorian bill
Parliament passes landmark legislation aimed at reducing number of Indigenous children entering care
Jason Clare says going to university ‘makes you money’ as he defends 7% indexation rise in student loans
Education minister says if he were to freeze indexation, it would cost taxpayers who might not have a degree
‘Toxic masculinity is alive and well,’ Liberal senator tells estimates – as it happened
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Lehrmann inquiry head could outline any adverse findings against individuals and institutions within days
An inquiry investigating how the ACT criminal justice system handled Brittany Higgins’ rape allegations has likely finished hearing evidence
Bus driver charged with raping children he met while working in Queensland
Man, 55, from north of Brisbane accused of attacking 15 children some of whom he befriended while working as a driver between 1983 and 2001
The Ben Roberts-Smith defamation judgment: read Justice Anthony Besanko’s full summary
In the federal court of Australia the judge dismissed the Victoria Cross recipient’s case against three newspapers who accused him of war crimes
Non-EU workers outnumber EU ones in various UK sectors in post-Brexit shift
Exclusive: Analysis shows shift towards non-EU and British workers in sectors which once relied on EU workforceThere are now more non-EU than EU workers in a number of sectors that were previously reliant on European citizens, demonstrating the Brexit effect and the impact of international events on immigration patterns.Guardian analysis shows that the number of non-EU workers surpassed their EU counterparts for the first time in 2022, at an average of 2.7 million against 2.5 million workers last year. Continue reading...
Covid inquiry must examine impact of UK’s ‘broken sick pay’ system, says TUC
Failure to provide proper financial support left millions exposed to pandemic, says union bossThe Covid inquiry must take an unflinching look at how the UK’s lack of decent sick pay left the country “brutally exposed” during the pandemic, the TUC has said.The UK entered the pandemic with the lowest rate of statutory sick pay (SSP) in the OECD, an intergovernmental organisation with 38 member countries, and with millions unable access it, the union body claimed. Continue reading...
Uber to cap surge pricing in NSW during public transport outages after deal with government
Rideshare giant to limit pricing during disruptions in an area with transport minister stressing it will come ‘at no cost to taxpayers’
Female-only app represented by Katherine Deves fails to throw out transgender discrimination suit
Roxanne Tickle is suing Giggle for Girls after it blocked her account because she was ‘considered male’
Chris Dawson’s former student says she left out ‘intimate, disgusting details’ when questioned by police
Woman known as AB tells court she previously omitted some details of sexual activities she did not remember or think relevantA former student of Chris Dawson left out the “intimate, disgusting details” of their alleged sexual activities when questioned by police searching for the woman he’s been convicted of murdering.Dawson, 74, has pleaded not guilty to engaging in sexual activity with a woman known in court as AB between July and December 1980, while she was aged 16 and his student on Sydney’s northern beaches. Continue reading...
Australian researchers make world-first endometriosis breakthrough
Scientists grow tissue from every known type of endometriosis, observing changes and comparing how they respond to treatmentsSydney researchers have made a world-first leap forward that could change the treatment of endometriosis and improve the health of women living with the painful and debilitating disease.Researchers from Sydney’s Royal hospital for women have grown tissue from every known type of endometriosis, observing changes and comparing how they respond to treatments. Continue reading...
Pauline Hanson denies ‘Pakistan’ tweet aimed at Mehreen Faruqi was racist
Greens senator seeking $150,000 from One Nation leader, who wrote that Faruqi should ‘pack [her] bags and piss off back to Pakistan’
BHP admits it underpaid workers nearly $430m since 2010 in public holiday error
A review indicates the mining giant incorrectly deducted leave for about 28,500 current and former staff
ACCC’s airline monitoring program to conclude despite growing claims of fare overcharging
Exclusive: consumer and aviation figures call for continued scrutiny as Australian companies post multibillion-dollar profits and ticket prices remain high
China’s Xi Jinping calls for greater state control of AI to counter ‘dangerous storms’
President says national security threats are increasing and urged greater oversight of artificial intelligence and data securityChinese leader Xi Jinping and top officials have called for greater state oversight of artificial intelligence as part of work to counter “dangerous storms” facing the country, state media reported.The president and other ruling Communist party officials agreed at a meeting of the National Security Commission to “improve security governance of network data and artificial intelligence”. Continue reading...
Lonely hearts ad led another woman to key witness in Marion Barter’s disappearance, inquest hears
Coroner seeking to establish what happened to Gold Coast school teacher, subject of The Lady Vanishes podcast
Australian government loses bid to cancel lease for new Russian embassy site
Canberra’s National Capital Authority terminated lease on block of land in Yarralumla but federal court rules the move was ‘invalid and of no effect’
NSW lawyers call for reform of ‘disgraceful’ tactic churches use to block abuse claims
Critics say the seeking of permanent stays in cases where perpetrators have died amount to ‘another layer of abuse’ for survivors and a failure of moral leadership
UK supermarkets cut diesel prices by 7p a litre after watchdog concerns
Reduction follows CMA plans to grill executives about ‘sustained higher margins’ but RAC says retailers should go furtherSupermarkets have cut more than 7p a litre from the price of diesel since the UK’s competition watchdog warned it would question retail bosses about unnecessarily high forecourt prices, according to the RAC.The motoring group found that the average price of diesel fell by 7.44p a litre, from 151.02p two weeks ago to 143.58p this week, after the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) raised concerns that retailers were making “sustained higher margins” from sales of diesel. Continue reading...
Boy, 3, found dead in Sydney unit alongside injured 45-year-old man
NSW police are investigating after toddler found in Riverwoood on Wednesday afternoonA toddler has been found dead in a Sydney apartment alongside an injured a man, authorities say.The three-year-old was found inside the Riverwood home at about 4pm on Wednesday.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup Continue reading...
Novak Djokovic defiant despite warning not to repeat political message
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