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Updated 2024-11-27 12:45
National Grid cancels plans to start emergency winter scheme
Operator had indicated it could ask consumers to start using demand flexibility service on TuesdayThe UK electricity network operator has cancelled plans to activate its emergency winter plan on Tuesday after steps were taken to allay concerns over power supplies.National Grid indicated on Monday morning it could issue the requirement for consumers to start using its new demand flexibility service, which rewards businesses and households that shift their power usage away from times of peak demand. Continue reading...
Candidates snub Sunak’s ethics adviser role left vacant for five months
Concern that PM wants to keep same remit as for Christopher Geidt, with no enhanced powersSeveral candidates have turned down the role of Rishi Sunak’s ethics adviser, to which the prime minister had pledged to appoint someone when he entered No 10, the Guardian understands.Sunak is not offering candidates any enhanced powers – which means advisers would not be able to launch their own investigations, it is understood. Continue reading...
OneLove armband sends ‘very divisive message’, says Qatar official
Head of World Cup organising committee says he sees rainbow armband as protest against Islamic valuesThe head of Qatar’s World Cup organising committee has accused teams who wanted to wear the OneLove armband at the World Cup of sending a “very divisive message” to the Islamic and Arab world.Hassan al-Thawadi’s comments came as the UK sports minister Stuart Andrew said he would wear the rainbow-coloured armband at the England v Wales match on Tuesday. Continue reading...
Chinese police out in force in bid to counter Covid lockdown protests
Barriers erected on street where demonstrations have been held against rigid policies against coronavirusChinese police have launched a show of force across the country in an effort to head off further protests against the government’s rigid zero-Covid policies.Since Friday, a wave of protests has spread across multiple cities, prompted by the death of 10 people in a building fire in Urumqi in Xinjiang. Much of the region had been under lockdown for more than three months, and people blamed the lockdown for the deaths. Continue reading...
US awaits ‘serious response’ from Russia over Brittney Griner release proposal
Diplomat in Moscow says US has ‘put a significant proposal on the table’ in effort to free basketball star jailed on drugs convictionThe US is waiting for a “serious response” from Russia to a series of proposals regarding the release of the basketball star Brittney Griner, a senior US diplomat said.Elizabeth Rood, the US chargée d’affaires in Moscow, told Russia’s state-owned RIA news agency that talks about freeing Griner – who was sentenced to nine years in a penal colony on charges of possessing and smuggling drugs – were ongoing. But Rood said Russia was yet to seriously engage. Continue reading...
I’m a Celeb gave Matt Hancock exposure other MPs can only dream of
Making the final was triumph for the former health secretary who was predicted to be first out of the jungle
Chelsea Bridge death: family bring test case against police watchdog
Exclusive: family accuse IOPC of failing to properly investigate Met officers who Tasered Oladeji OmishoreThe family of Oladeji Omishore, who drowned in June shortly after he was Tasered by police, are taking the police watchdog to the high court in a test case, accusing them of failing to properly investigate the officers involved.Omishore, 41, who lived close to London’s Chelsea Bridge, had stepped out of his home on 4 June this year when the incident happened. He was experiencing a mental health crisis, which his family say police should have tried to de-escalate. Two officers discharged their Tasers multiple times, Omishore fled and jumped into the Thames and he subsequently drowned. Continue reading...
Tory MPs’ plan for immediate return of Albanian asylum seekers ‘unworkable’
Refugee groups says proposal would breach UN convention and put vulnerable people at risk
Calls for crackdown on construction in Italy after Ischia disaster
Officials warned last year more than 90% of municipalities were at risk from landslides, floods and erosionThere have been calls to limit and crack down on both legal and illegal construction in Italy after the head of the country’s civil protection office said more than 90% of Italian municipalities were at risk from landslides and other natural disasters.Fabrizio Curcio made the comments in an interview with La Stampa after travelling to the southern Italian island of Ischia, where eight people including a 22-day-old baby are so far confirmed to have been killed in a landslide on Saturday. Continue reading...
North of England rail faces ‘utter chaos’, warns business group
Introduction of new timetable could lead to crisis, says Northern Powerhouse PartnershipBusiness leaders have warned that rail services across the north of England could “collapse into utter chaos” unless the government pushes urgently for a resolution to months of disruption.Rail services are already recording historic levels of cancellations, and the imminent introduction of a new timetable could lead to a “crisis”, the Northern Powerhouse Partnership (NPP), which represents industry in the north of England, has warned in a letter to the UK transport secretary, Mark Harper. Continue reading...
BBC says Chinese police assaulted and detained its reporter at Shanghai protest
Journalist Ed Lawrence was beaten after being arrested at a protest against China’s strict Covid restrictions, broadcaster saysChinese police assaulted and detained a BBC journalist covering a protest in Shanghai on Sunday, releasing him after several hours, the broadcaster has said.“The BBC is extremely concerned about the treatment of our journalist Ed Lawrence, who was arrested and handcuffed while covering the protests in Shanghai,” a spokesperson for the British public service broadcaster said. Continue reading...
FCA reveals £49m redress scheme for British Steel pensions
Financial advisers to pay about £45,000 a worker to 1,000 staff who received unsuitable adviceMore than 1,000 former members of the British Steel pension scheme who received unsuitable advice from financial advisers accused of “enriching” themselves will receive an average payout of £45,000 in compensation.The City watchdog on Monday launched plans for a scheme that seeks to compensate those who had not yet received redress after being given poor pension transfer advice when British Steel fell into financial hardship. Continue reading...
‘Publishing is not a crime’: media groups urge US to drop Julian Assange charges
First outlets to publish WikiLeaks material, including the Guardian, come together to oppose prosecutionThe US government must drop its prosecution of the WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange because it is undermining press freedom, according to the media organisations that first helped him publish leaked diplomatic cables.Twelve years ago today, the Guardian, the New York Times, Le Monde, Der Spiegel, and El País collaborated to release excerpts from 250,000 documents obtained by Assange in the “Cablegate” leak. The material, leaked to WikiLeaks by the then American soldier Chelsea Manning, exposed the inner workings of US diplomacy around the world. Continue reading...
Woman’s name and tiny sketches found in 1,300-year-old medieval text
Exclusive: Old English name, Eadburg, repeatedly scored into manuscript had remained hidden for more than 12 centuriesFor nearly 1,300 years, no one knew it was there. The name of a highly educated English woman, secretly scratched on to the pages of a rare medieval manuscript in the eighth century, but impossible to read – until now.Academics have discovered the Old English female name Eadburg was repeatedly scored into the surface of the religious text, using a method that kept it hidden from the naked eye for more than 12 centuries. Continue reading...
Rolls-Royce and easyJet test aircraft engine running on hydrogen
Firm says trial is ‘major step’ towards proving hydrogen could be zero-carbon aviation fuel of the futureRolls-Royce has said it has run an aircraft engine on hydrogen in what is thought to be a world first for the aviation industry, which is considering using the fuel to decarbonise air travel.The FTSE 100 engineering company said the ground test was a “major step towards proving that hydrogen could be a zero-carbon aviation fuel of the future”, in a joint project with the airline easyJet. Continue reading...
‘A sense of urgency’: capping coal prices to reduce power bills would need state support, cabinet told
Exclusive: It is expected Labor will adopt a suite of reforms to address an anticipated 56% increase in electricity prices
Iranian artists call for boycott of cultural institutions with links to regime
Art activism has increased in and outside the country since death of 22-year-old Mahsa AminiDozens of Iranian artists have called for an international boycott of cultural institutions run by or affiliated with the Islamic Republic in protest against the regime’s worsening human rights abuses.The call by artists, writers, film-makers and academics living in Iran and among its diaspora comes amid growing anti-government art activism by Iranians inside and outside the country after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini. Continue reading...
Dodson ‘taken aback’ by Nationals’ call on Indigenous voice – as it happened
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Fans can watch Socceroos at the pub as NSW and WA extend trading hours for Australia’s World Cup matches
Licensed venues can stay open if broadcasting vital group game against Denmark which kicks off 2am Thursday
Weather tracker: temperatures plunge to -45C in parts of Russia
Siberian cold front forecast to push into China, Mongolia and then UK by WednesdayA large area of high pressure covering the whole of eastern Europe is bringing severely low temperatures across Siberia. In a part of the world where temperatures are often below freezing at this time of year, the mercury has been 20C to 25C below average in areas over the weekend, with central and eastern Russia experiencing temperatures widely of -25C to -45C.Over the next couple of days, westerly winds will result in temperatures rising above average in northern Russia but temperatures will remain 10C to 20C below normal in southern Russia. The orientation of the high-pressure system will allow northerly winds to send the cold air southwards across central and eastern Asia over the next few days. Temperatures will fall widely below average here too, with northern and eastern parts of China and Mongolia particularly affected. Temperatures here will fall 10C to 20C below normal by midweek as the same area of high pressure builds in and traps the cold air with temperatures struggling to rise above freezing by day. Continue reading...
Victorian Liberals raise ‘faith values’ and Labor-style broad appeal in jostle for party’s leadership
Ryan Smith confirms he would reinstate controversial MP Renee Heath to the party room while John Pesutto urges the party to connect ‘more widely’
Teenager arrested over stabbings of two boys in south-east London
Police treating both incidents, in which two 16-year-olds died in Thamesmead and Abbey Wood, as linkedA teenager has been arrested over the fatal stabbings of two 16-year-old boys a mile apart in south-east London, police said.Kearne Solanke was found with stab wounds in Thamesmead, and Charlie Bartolo was discovered in Abbey Wood, on Saturday afternoon. Continue reading...
British Museum works to restore ‘rare and complex’ Michelangelo drawing
16th-century work Epifania is one of only two existing cartoons by the Italian masterOne of only two surviving Michelangelo cartoons is undergoing delicate and highly technical conservation work at the British Museum in an attempt to stabilise the fragile work for the coming decades.Epifania, created by the Italian master artist around 1550, has degraded and been subject to repeated repairs over its almost 500-year history. Now it is laid out in the museum’s state-of-the-art conservation studios as specialists consider how best to preserve the complex structure and black chalk lines. Continue reading...
How Chinese media have – and haven’t – covered widespread protests against zero-Covid
State-run media outlets largely ignore nationwide protests, but continue to push the importance of Covid restrictionsChinese media have largely ignored widespread protests across the country, with prominent state newspaper front pages instead choosing to focus on Taiwan’s local elections, a Chinese-built solar plant in Qatar and the rising number of Chinese women choosing to get tanned in beauty salons.Protests flared across Chinese cities over the weekend, with calls for political freedoms and an end to Covid lockdowns. Continue reading...
Liberal MP may support Labor censure of Scott Morrison over secret ministries scandal
Bridget Archer says she is considering her position regarding the censure, reiterates her dismay at the previous prime minister’s actions
Defence training pushed recruits beyond their limits with fatal outcomes, ex-soldier tells inquiry
‘Every year there was a suicide,’ James Geercke says on first day of royal commission hearings in Wagga Wagga
National party won’t support Indigenous voice to parliament, saying it won’t close the gap
The Liberals are yet to reach a position on the referendum, which is expected by the end of 2023
Covid-19 Australia data tracker: coronavirus cases, deaths, hospitalisations and vaccination
Guardian Australia brings together all the figures on Covid-19 cases, as well as stats, charts and state-by-state data from NSW, Victoria, Queensland, SA, WA, Tasmania, the ACT and NT. Here you can also find the numbers on the vaccine rollout and fourth dose booster vaccination rates.
Poorer women in UK have sixth-highest cancer death rates in Europe, WHO finds
Those from deprived backgrounds are particularly at risk of dying from cancer of the lungs, liver, bladder and oesophagusPoorer women in Britain have some of the highest death rates from cancer in Europe, an in-depth new World Health Organization study has found.They are much more likely to die from the disease compared with better-off women in the UK and women in poverty in many other European countries. Continue reading...
Queensland windfarm to provide enough power for 1.4m homes with new $2bn investment
Spain-based Acciona Energia will double capacity of project 200km south-west of Brisbane
NT police issue arrest warrant for reality TV star Matt Wright over fatal helicopter crash
Chris Wilson, 34, killed in February while hanging below a helicopter to harvest eggs from crocodile nests for television show Outback Wrangler
Nicole Kidman surprises Broadway with $100,000 bid for Hugh Jackman’s hat
Actor’s gesture draws gasps and cheers at charity auction, held after a performance of Jackman’s hit musical The Music ManNicole Kidman has surprised both Broadway audiences and Hugh Jackman by bidding US$100,000 (A$150,000, £83,000) for a hat signed by Jackman after a performance of her former co-star’s musical The Music Man.During an auction for the charity Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids after the performance on Saturday, Kidman made her presence known by shouting her bid of $100,000 for the hat, which led to gasps and cheers in the crowd, then a standing ovation. Continue reading...
Police believed Melissa Caddick was likely on the run when she first went missing, inquest told
Det Insp Glen Browne said concerns the alleged fraudster had taken her own life were not given as much weight early in the investigation
Partner of detained Australian journalist Cheng Lei hopeful of ‘compassionate and speedy resolution’
Nick Coyle said it was positive that prime minister Anthony Albanese and foreign minister Penny Wong had raised her case with their Chinese counterparts
DWP deducting on average £80 a month from Scottish families on UC
Exclusive: Report finds struggling families are having on average 10% of monthly income deducted to cover debtLow-income families in Scotland are having on average 10% of their monthly income deducted by the Department for Work and Pensions to cover debts such as universal credit advances or school meals payments, according to research.The report for Aberlour Children’s Charity, seen by the Guardian, found that families in receipt of universal credit (UC) are having their monthly income reduced on average by £80 to cover spiralling debt. Continue reading...
UK homeowners forced to settle for below asking price, Zoopla says
Property website data shows housing market is slowing, with 44% less demand for homes and sellers accepting 3% below asking pricePeople selling their homes have typically had to settle for below the asking price in recent weeks, according to Zoopla, which is predicting house prices will fall by about 5% next year.The average price achieved in recent weeks has been 3% below a seller’s asking price, when for much of 2021 and the first half of this year it matched the asking price, the property website said. Zoopla said it expects discounts to increase further in 2023. Continue reading...
Amazon’s UK tax bill could rise by £29m amid business rates overhaul
Hikes set to hit warehouses and online retailers hardest in 2023 as UK government addresses ‘brick v clicks’ tax gapAmazon’s UK tax bill jump could jump by £29m next year as a result of changes to business rates that are scheduled to hit warehouses and online retailers the hardest.The online retailer is likely to be among firms facing big tax rises following the chancellor’s autumn statement, according to analysis from the real estate adviser Altus Group. Continue reading...
Lack of support denting prospects for UK computer chip sector, say MPs
Call for semiconductor industry plan to be published urgently to help keep Britain in global supply chainThe UK is missing out on a wave of investment and falling behind other countries in the fast-growing semiconductor industry because of a lack of support from the government, MPs have warned.The government should urgently publish a long-delayed semiconductor strategy, and also look to create partnerships with allies to try to ensure the UK remains part of the semiconductor supply chain, according to a report published on Monday by MPs on parliament’s business committee. Continue reading...
Anti-lockdown protests spread in China as anger rises over zero-Covid strategy
Beijing students shout ‘freedom will prevail’, as Urumqi fire prompts levels of disobedience unprecedented in Xi eraPeople opposed to China’s stringent Covid restrictions have protested in cities across the country in the biggest wave of civil disobedience on the mainland since Xi Jinping assumed power a decade ago.Protests triggered by a deadly apartment fire in the far west of the country last week took place on Sunday in cities including Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu, Wuhan and Guangzhou, according to footage shared on social media, in defiance of a series of heavy-handed arrests of demonstrators on Saturday night. Continue reading...
Favourite Jill Scott wins this year’s I’m a Celebrity, with Matt Hancock third
Former England footballer won public vote, with actor Owen Warner in second place and ex-health secretary coming thirdJill Scott has been crowned queen of the jungle after winning I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! on Sunday night.The former England footballer, 35, who was the bookies’ favourite to triumph, accrued the most votes from the public, with actor Owen Warner finishing second after both spent 23 days in camp. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak to set out pragmatic approach to Russia and China
Prime minister to make first major foreign policy speech, favouring a long-term, pragmatic attitude to Moscow and BeijingRishi Sunak will pledge an “evolutionary approach” to British foreign policy, arguing that states like Russia and China plan for the long term and the UK needs to follow suit as he attempts to set out his vision for the country’s place on the global stage.In his first major foreign policy speech since becoming prime minister, he will draw on his years running the Treasury to say that the UK’s strength abroad must be underpinned by a strong economy at home as it stands up to competitors with “robust pragmatism”. Continue reading...
Murder hunt begins after man stabbed in Richmond, south-west London
Reece Newcombe, 31, is believed to have been attacked with broken glass in a fight on Richmond BridgeDetectives have launched a murder investigation after a man was stabbed to death with broken glass during a fight on Richmond Bridge.Police were called to the scene in south-west London at about 4am on Saturday and found 31-year-old Reece Newcombe, who had suffered serious injuries. Continue reading...
Anger grows as illegal construction partly blamed for landslide deaths on Italian island
Seven confirmed dead and search continues for people missing after Saturday’s disaster on IschiaAs rescuers continued to search for five people still missing after a catastrophic landslide in Ischia, anger was growing on the southern Italian island on Sunday over the years of rampant illegal construction that contributed to the disaster.Seven people, including a three-week-old baby and a pair of young siblings, are confirmed to have died in Saturday’s landslide, which was triggered by a violent storm that sent mud and debris from Monte Epomeo, a 789-metre (2,590ft) peak, crashing into the hamlet of Casamicciola Terme. One victim – 32-year-old Eleonora Sirabella – has been named. The others, who include the infant boy’s parents, a five-year-old girl and her 11-year-old brother, a 31-year-old island resident and a Bulgarian tourist, have not yet been officially identified. Continue reading...
Ministers face pressure to explain PPE Medpro contracts decision
Labour to ask how Michelle Mone-linked firm was assessed as fit to agree deal worth more than £200mMinisters will come under intense pressure this week to explain how they assessed that a personal protective equipment (PPE) company linked to the Conservative peer Michelle Mone was fit to receive government contracts worth more than £200m during the pandemic.Angela Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader, has drawn up a list of parliamentary questions over the Department of Health and Social Care’s (DHSC) decision to award major public contracts to the firm and whether it took into account its tax record. Continue reading...
No 10 hiring of healthcare lobbyist prompts privatisation concern
Exclusive: Adviser role for Bill Morgan also raises questions over potential conflict of interestRishi Sunak has appointed a private healthcare lobbyist with links to a series of controversial clients to advise him in Downing Street, raising concerns over further privatisation within the NHS.Bill Morgan, a founding partner of the PR and lobbying firm Evoke Incisive Health, joined No 10 as a health policy adviser earlier this month where he is believed to be helping drive through NHS efficiencies. Continue reading...
Candles take the brunt in gore-free production of Titus Andronicus
Shakespeare’s most violent play to be staged with actors’ candles being pummelled in scenes with bloodshedEight years after a stomach-churning, splatter-fest production of Titus Andronicus led to some audience members fainting, Shakespeare’s Globe is to ask how do you generate a similar murderous horror in a more intimate, candle-lit space?The solution? The candles get bumped off. Continue reading...
Brexit has worsened shortage of NHS doctors, analysis shows
Exclusive: More than 4,000 European medics have chosen not to work in NHS since Britain left EU, data revealsBrexit has worsened the UK’s acute shortage of doctors in key areas of care and led to more than 4,000 European doctors choosing not to work in the NHS, research reveals.The disclosure comes as growing numbers of medics quit in disillusionment at their relentlessly busy working lives in the increasingly overstretched health service. Official figures show the NHS in England alone has vacancies for 10,582 physicians. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war live: UK confirms supply of missiles to Kyiv as Russian forces might be preparing to leave Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant
UK MoD says it has provided Brimstone 2 missiles to Ukraine; reports suggest there are signs troops could be getting ready to leave
Xi unlikely to tolerate dissent as momentous protests shake China
Chinese leader will see widespread demonstrations against zero-Covid policy as threat to CCP’s authorityJust five weeks after being elected to a historic third term, President Xi Jinping suddenly faces cracks in the facade of unchallenged authority that he so successfully presented to the world at the 20th national congress of the Chinese Communist party.For groups of protesters, apparently without central coordination, to take to the streets across China and to social media, and for some then explicitly to call for Xi and the Communist party to stand aside, is a seismic shock. Continue reading...
Retailers hope busy shopping period will reduce stock filling up warehouses
Improved delivery times from suppliers has caught out many big-name shops such as Marks & SpencerBritish retailers are hoping that one of the traditionally busiest shopping periods of the year will help reduce the amount of clothing filling warehouses after being caught out by improving supplier-delivery times.Marks & Spencer is among the big retailers that have found they are receiving orders more quickly than expected, giving them an additional headache just as the UK economy braces for an expected recession. Continue reading...
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