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Updated 2024-11-27 23:15
Barrister says she became legal expert while in Home Office immigration detention
Aderonke Apata says she has Home Office to thank for career as she fought removal to NigeriaA refugee who has just been called to the bar says she has the Home Office to thank for her career after she became an amateur legal expert while locked up in a detention centre.Aderonke Apata, 55, from Nigeria, said she was proud to take part in a ceremony last week where she, along with dozens of other newly qualified barristers, were formally called to the bar. Continue reading...
‘Surely … not again’: what the papers say about Johnson and the Tory leadership race
Former PM Johnson and ex-chancellor Rishi Sunak dominate front pages as the contest for the Conservative party’s top job intensifies
Flurry of support gives Sunak close to 90 backers – as it happened
Late evening declarations from Hancock, Dowden, Ellwood and Tugendhat for former chancellor. This blog is now closed
Angelina Jolie to play Maria Callas in Spencer director’s next biopic
The Oscar-winner will play the opera singer in a film that explores the ‘tumultuous, beautiful, and tragic’ story of her lifeAngelina Jolie is set to play opera singer Maria Callas in a new drama from Chilean film-maker Pablo Larraín.Maria will tell “the tumultuous, beautiful and tragic story of the life of the world’s greatest opera singer, relived and re-imagined during her final days in 1970s Paris” with a script from Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight, who last collaborated with Larraín for Princess Diana drama Spencer. Continue reading...
Labour MP Chris Matheson resigns over ‘unwanted sexual advances’
Move will trigger byelection in Chester after panel finds he breached Commons’ sexual misconduct policy
Nadine Dorries to stand in for Piers Morgan on TalkTV show
One of Boris Johnson’s most vocal backers to guest-host Uncensored in week of Tory leadership contestNadine Dorries will stand in for Piers Morgan on his TalkTV show, Uncensored, next week as the Conservative leadership contest is expected to play out.The Tory MP and former culture secretary, who is one of Boris Johnson’s most vocal and prominent supporters, will guest-host on Monday and Tuesday joined by Emily Sheffield, the former editor of the Evening Standard. Continue reading...
‘Real possibility’: Boris Johnson urged to stand in Tory leadership race
Former PM dominates debate as contest to replace Liz Truss begins, only six weeks after he left office
More than 800 evacuated after fuel tanker crash sparks huge blaze in Mexico
A dozen people were rescued from burning homes after a tanker truck crashed into a railway overpass in the central town of AguascalientesA huge blaze erupted in central Mexico after a fuel tanker truck crashed into an overpass by a rail line, scorching homes, engulfing the area in thick smoke and leading to a mass evacuation, but causing no fatalities, authorities said.Video footage of the fire on social media showed a cargo train hurtling through the flames after Thursday’s accident in the city of Aguascalientes, as stunned drivers at the scene retreated from their cars holding children close. Continue reading...
Further cuts will kill off NHS dental services, chancellor told
Exclusive: British Dental Association chief says there is ‘no more fat to trim’ amid fears for health budgetJeremy Hunt has been told that any cuts to the health budget will in effect “kill” dental services across the UK and deny millions of patients access to a dentist on the NHS.The chancellor has told members of the cabinet that “everything is on the table” as he seeks to find tens of billions of pounds in savings after ditching the economic plan of Liz Truss, who said on Thursday she was standing down as prime minister. Health is one key area expected to be hit. Continue reading...
Labour to step up efforts to stop ‘reckless’ Northern Ireland protocol bill in Lords
Exclusive: peers to table more than 20 changes to proposed legislation when committee stage beginsLabour peers are to step up their campaign to stop the “reckless” Northern Ireland protocol bill being passed with demands for more than 20 changes.Jenny Chapman, the shadow cabinet minister in the Lords, told the Guardian the bill was “an abomination, undermining the UK’s hard-won reputation as a responsible, trustworthy partner” and called on the government to “scrap this reckless legislation”. Continue reading...
Man found guilty of murdering Bruce Saunders and disposing of body in woodchipper
Gregory Lee Roser has been found guilty of the 2017 murder at a property north of Brisbane
Iran protests: democracies have ‘moral obligation’ to help, Canada foreign minister says
Mélanie Joly tells meeting of female foreign ministers that they must help ‘amplify the voices of women in Iran’Canada’s foreign minister has said democracies have a “moral obligation” to help the “incredibly brave” women taking to the streets of Iran in protest, as she met other female foreign ministers to condemn the ongoing violence that has rocked the country for weeks.“As women foreign ministers we have a responsibility to help amplify the voices of women in Iran,” Mélanie Joly told a gathering of 14 of her female counterparts, according to a readout of the event provided to the Guardian. “As women leaders from around the world, we can make a powerful statement of support for women’s rights in Iran, and by extension, women’s rights everywhere.” Continue reading...
‘Will Boris bounce back?’: what the papers say as Liz Truss quits and Tories search for new leader
The UK newspaper front pages cover another historic day in politics and speculate on who is in the running to replace Liz TrussThe resignation of Liz Truss after 45 chaotic days as prime minister leads the front page of every major newspaper in the UK on Friday.The Guardian’s front page says that “After 45 days of turmoil, prime minister bows to the inevitable”, and calls this moment “The bitter end”. Continue reading...
Theo Hayez inquest: mystery still surrounds Belgian backpacker’s death but suicide unlikely
NSW state coroner unable to establish if his death was an accident or involved foul play but says no reason for him to ‘vanish intentionally’
Thomas Keneally shares $50,000 book prize with fellow nominees
The 87-year-old Australian author, who won the ARA Historical Novel prize, says he ‘wanted to help some of the other writers’ because of how hard it is to make a living as a writerThomas Keneally, one of Australia’s most acclaimed novelists, says he will share a $50,000 literary prize with his fellow nominees.The 87-year-old novelist, who has previously won the Man Booker prize and the Miles Franklin, was announced on Thursday as the winner of the ARA Historical Novel prize for his latest novel Corporal Hitler’s Pistol. Continue reading...
Almost 8m people in UK struggling to pay bills, says City watchdog
One in four adults either in financial trouble or at brink of difficulty, FCA survey findsMillions of people in the UK are struggling to pay their bills, according to the City watchdog, which said a growing proportion of the population is having trouble making ends meet.A survey by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) laid bare the impact of the cost of living crisis, saying about one in four (24%) of adults in the UK were either in financial difficulty or would fall into trouble if they suffered a financial shock. Continue reading...
Private rents in Britain hit record highs, with 20% rise in some areas
Demand has soared in past 12 months while total number of available properties fell by 9%Average private rents in Britain have soared to record highs, with severe shortages of properties resulting in more tenants paying above the asking price and stretched budgets forcing more people to downsize to studio flats, data shows.The average advertised rent in Greater London is 16.1% higher than a year ago, which is the highest rate of growth of any region on record, according to the property website Rightmove. Continue reading...
‘A thrill’: Björk to perform in Australia for first time since 2008 in Perth festival exclusive
Icelandic singer will bring her Cornucopia tour to Western Australia only, playing a purpose-built 5,000 capacity tent
Liz Truss quits: candidates to be prime minister must have at least 100 nominations from Tory MPs – as it happened
Nominations for next Tory leader will close at 2pm on Monday before next prime minister is confirmed on 28 October
India criticised over arbitrary travel bans after photojournalist blocked from Pulitzer trip
Sanna Irshad Mattoo says she was barred from taking a flight to New York where she was scheduled to receive the 2022 Pulitzer PrizeIndian authorities have been criticised after a Kashmiri photojournalist said she was barred from taking a flight to New York where she was scheduled to receive the 2022 Pulitzer prize.Sanna Irshad Mattoo, 27, was in a team of Reuters photographers who had won a Pulitzer for feature photography for their coverage of the coronavirus crisis in India. Continue reading...
Lidia Thorpe’s relationship with ex-bikie should have been declared to law enforcement committee, Labor says
Parliamentary committee has processes to declare any potential conflicts of interest, then deputy chair Anne Aly says
Liz Truss kickstarts leadership race after ending chaotic 45 days as PM
As Starmer calls for general election, candidates scrabble to win nominations from at least 100 MPs to join raceLiz Truss announced on Thursday she was quitting No 10 after a calamitous 45 days in office, triggering a Tory leadership contest, with Rishi Sunak, Penny Mordaunt and Boris Johnson battling it out to become Britain’s next prime minister.At a lectern outside Downing Street during another tumultuous day, Truss admitted that she could not deliver the radical economic mandate on which she was elected by Conservative members. Continue reading...
Ukraine plans power cuts after Russian strikes on plants
Local ‘stabilisation blackouts’ will take place around country at times between 7am and 10pm
Canada supreme court refuses to hear appeal in blow to residential school survivors
Survivors of St Anne’s Indian residential school allege government withheld key evidence in determining compensation for victimsCanada’s supreme court has declined to hear an appeal brought by a group of Indigenous residential school survivors, dealing a major blow to their decade-long fight against federal government over thousands of unreleased documents.Survivors of St Anne’s Indian residential school had hoped the country’s top court would take their case, which alleges Canada’s federal government withheld key evidence in determining compensation for victims of abuse at the school in northern Ontario. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: UK sanctions Iran over drones used in Russian attacks in Ukraine; Kyiv restricts power use – as it happened
UK implements new sanctions on Iran for supplying Russia with drones; Ukrainians prepare for hours-long power outages. This live blog is now closed
Vanuatu to welcome first female MP since 2008 after snap election
Vanuatu Election Commission yet to declare official results but Julia King likely to be lone female voice in 52-member parliamentVotes are still being counted in Vanuatu’s snap election, but with the preliminary votes tallied, one change seems certain: Vanuatu’s all-male parliament is no more, with the first woman elected to office since 2008 likely to be announced within days.“I’m excited for Vanuatu women of course,” Julia King said. King looks set to be returned as the MP for Mele on the outskirts of the capital of Port Vila. “I’m happy for women in general to know they have a voice that can be represented up there. That’s the part I can be excited about.” Continue reading...
Dozens dead in Chad capital as security forces fire on protesters
‘Rebels’ accused of setting fire to ruling party HQ during demonstrations calling for faster democratic transitionSecurity forces in Chad’s capital, N’Djamena, have violently dispersed banned protests calling for a quicker transition to democratic rule, leaving at least 50 dead and dozens injured, according to the country’s prime minister.Palls of black smoke could be seen in some areas in N’Djamena and the crack of teargas grenades could be heard throughout much of the day. Several roads had been blocked with barricades and burning tyres and most shops closed their doors to avoid looting. Continue reading...
All in a day’s debacle: 24 hours that undid Liz Truss
Despite the departure of her home secretary, the PM could probably have clung on, but then came the extraordinary unforced errors
Schoolboy protester dies in Iran after reportedly being shot at close range
Abolfazl Adinezadeh reportedly shot at from less than a metre away by security forces in city of MashhadA 17-year-old schoolboy has died in Iran’s second largest city, Mashhad, after reportedly being shot at close range by state forces during anti-government protests.Abolfazl Adinezadeh’s death certificate showed that he died of liver and kidney damage caused by birdshot, according to a BBC Persian report. A doctor was cited as estimating the distance from which the teenager was shot on 8 October as less than 1 metre. Continue reading...
Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group to stop buying fur products
Policy change means group’s stores will have no new fur products on shelves from next autumnThe owner of House of Fraser, Flannels and Sports Direct has said it will stop buying fur products with immediate effect after lobbying from the Humane Society.Frasers Group said the change in policy meant it would no longer have new fur products on its shelves from next autumn. The company has not yet given a date from which consumers can be assured Frasers Group’s stores will be free of fur, however. Continue reading...
Universities in England and Wales double or triple student hardship funds
University and student leaders say they are seeing signs of students unable to cope with cost of living crisisUniversities in England and Wales are doubling or tripling their hardship funds in anticipation of “unprecedented” demand from students struggling with the cost of living, amid fears of widespread dropouts unless ministers offer more support.Just days into the new academic year, university and student leaders said they were already seeing signs of students being unable to cope, including not affording books for their courses, working 40-hour weeks, and being at risk of homelessness. Continue reading...
Russia threatens to ‘reassess collaboration’ with UN chief over drone inspection
Ambassador denies drones fired on Ukraine are supplied by Iran and calls UN investigation ‘illegitimate’
Israel imposes strict rules on travel to West Bank
Measures are expected to stifle Palestinian economy and cause problems for families with dual nationalityIsrael has implemented strict rules limiting the ability of foreigners to enter and stay in the occupied West Bank despite international criticism of the measures, which include the compulsory declaration of romantic relationships.A 97-page ordinance replacing the previous four-page document came into effect on Thursday for a two-year pilot period. It is expected to stifle the Palestinian economy and academia, the work of aid agencies, and create complications for hundreds of thousands of Palestinian families with dual nationality already struggling to navigate a convoluted permit system. Continue reading...
French right votes down move to make abortion constitutional right
Further proposals to be put before lower house next month after first attempt rejected in senateThe French government has said it supports making the country the first in the world to enshrine abortion as a constitutional right, after the right-dominated senate voted down the left’s first attempt at a proposal.Several political parties in France, from the left to the centrist lawmakers of Emmanuel Macron’s Renaissance party, began pushing for abortion rights to be written into the constitution after the US supreme court’s decision in June to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade ruling, which recognised a woman’s constitutional right to an abortion and legalised it nationwide. Continue reading...
Ovo revives interest in buying nationalised energy supplier Bulb
Gas and electricity company that pulled out of auction for Bulb last year could gazump bid by OctopusThe gas and electricity supplier Ovo has revived its interest in snapping up nationalised rival Bulb, potentially gazumping a bid by Octopus Energy.Ovo has written to Bulb’s special administrator to inform it that it is again considering a purchase. Ovo originally submitted an offer to buy Bulb shortly after it collapsed in November last year, but later pulled out of the auction, during which several bidders have fallen away. Continue reading...
Salad daze: lettuce and tofu to the fore in Twitter reactions to Liz Truss’s exit
Some thought it the ‘tip of the iceberg’, while others tried interesting ways of quantifying the PM’s tenureWith an unlikely war cry of “Lettuce! Lettuce! Lettuce!”, social media users set about the aftermath of Liz Truss’s resignation with gusto. The Daily Star’s live stream of whether a lettuce could outlast her time in office was a strong cue for jokes.The lettuce pretty much overshadowed everything. Continue reading...
Malcolm Turnbull warns NSW and Queensland of ‘company they’re keeping’ by blocking UN prison inspectors
Former prime minister disappointed by states’ decisions to not allow full access to UN subcommittee on prevention of torture
Catholic archbishop backs Victorian Liberals’ proposed religious discrimination changes
Opposition’s promise to amend act has also been criticised by the state’s peak multicultural organisation
Labor candidate overlooked for Kristina Keneally touted for NSW state seat
Tu Le says she supports a ‘rank-and-file’ vote but doesn’t control decisions made by party bosses
Bruce Lehrmann trial: jury continues deliberations in ACT supreme court case
Lehrmann is accused of raping Brittany Higgins on a couch in the office of then defence industry minister, an allegation he denies
Liz Truss resigns as PM and triggers fresh leadership election
Truss says she will step down after a week-long emergency contest to find successor
Rebel Wilson speaks about threat to be outed: ‘It was grubby behaviour’
The actor says she and Ramona Agruma were yet to tell some family members they were a couple when a planned news article forced her to announce itRebel Wilson has broken her silence on being forced to reveal a same-sex relationship before she was ready by a gossip columnist.Speaking to The Australian on Thursday, Rebel Wilson spoke of the “grubby” episode, saying she and girlfriend Ramona Agruma were yet to tell some family members they were a couple. Continue reading...
Indonesia bans sale of syrup medicines after at least 99 children die
Country investigating 206 cases of kidney injury that could be linked to ingredients in liquid medicinesIndonesia has banned the sale of all syrup medicines as it investigates the deaths this year of nearly 100 children, warning that they may contain ingredients linked to fatal kidney injuries.The move comes just weeks after the World Health Organization issued an alert over four Indian-made cough syrups that it said were potentially linked with acute kidney injuries and the deaths of 70 children in the Gambia. Continue reading...
Krishnan Guru-Murthy taken off air for swearing about Steve Baker
Channel 4 News anchor used offensive word off air to describe Northern Ireland minister
Liz Truss joins ranks of shortest-serving world leaders
At just 45 days, Truss has had the shortest UK premiership, but she at least outstrips some other leaders• Truss resigns - live news updates• Liz Truss resigns as PMCoup, assassination, abdication, suicide and illness – all have contributed to history’s shortest serving leaderships though none, in the literal sense at least, can be said to apply to Liz Truss.But at just 45 days, she faces the ignominy of being the UK’s shortest-serving prime minister by some degree. Continue reading...
Shetland loses telephone and internet services after subsea cable damaged
Police declare major incident as islanders warned it could take days for full services to be restoredIslanders on Shetland have lost nearly all landline telephone and internet services and some mobile services after a crucial subsea cable link with the mainland was damaged.Police on Shetland have declared a major incident and are patrolling the island to reassure residents, but have warned it could take several days for full services to be restored. Engineers are working to reroute some services using other networks. Continue reading...
Inquiry calls for new offence in England and Wales of failing to report child abuse
Final report of independent inquiry into child sexual abuse also urges creation of scheme to compensate victims
Ministers urged to expel China diplomat over Manchester protest violence
UK government facing growing criticism over ‘weak’ response after democracy campaigner attackedBritish ministers have been urged to immediately expel a senior Chinese diplomat who admitted being involved in violence against protesters in Manchester, as the government faced growing criticism over its “weak and supine” response.Zheng Xiyuan, the Chinese consul general, said it was his “duty” to grab the hair of a pro-democracy campaigner who was badly injured after being dragged inside the consulate grounds on Sunday. Continue reading...
Watchdog warns over eating food past use-by date amid UK cost of living squeeze
One in three people surveyed had eaten food past its use-by date in past month to save moneyThe food safety watchdog has warned consumers against eating food past its use-by date or switching off their fridge and freezer to save money.The Food Standards Agency (FSA), whose remit covers England, Northern Ireland and Wales, said people were taking risks because of financial pressures caused by rising energy bills and the cost of living crisis. Continue reading...
Russian fighter jet ‘released missile’ near RAF plane over Black Sea
British defence secretary Ben Wallace tells MPs of incident in international airspace on 29 SeptemberThe UK defence secretary has revealed that a Russian fighter jet recently “released a missile” in the vicinity of a British aircraft over the Black Sea.Ben Wallace told the Commons the incident occurred in “international airspace over the Black Sea” on 29 September, adding that an “unarmed RAF RC-135 Rivet Joint” plane was “interacted with” by two Russian Su-27s, one of which “released a missile in the vicinity of the RAF Rivet Joint beyond visual range”. Continue reading...
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