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Updated 2025-09-16 00:45
Priya Nadesalingam calls for friend to be granted a permanent home in Australia
Vashini Jayakumar has spent the past four years fighting for her best friend, Priya Nadasalingam, to return to Biloela – but now her own visa has expiredTamil asylum seekers, Vashini Jayakumar and Priya Nadesalingam, are more like sisters than best friends.And now that Nadesalingam is finally safe, she is hoping the community that supported her will step up to protect Jayakumar from the same fate. Continue reading...
Woman, 73, becomes 10th person to die after Jersey explosion
Kathy McGinness, who lived adjacent to flats that collapsed, died in hospital on Christmas DayA woman injured in an explosion at a block of flats in Jersey earlier this month died on Christmas Day, taking the death toll to 10.Kathleen (Kathy) McGinness, 73, who lived at Haut du Mont adjacent to the building that collapsed, died at Jersey general hospital. Continue reading...
North Yorkshire RNLI crew issues flare plea after Christmas Day search
Whitby crew urges people not to set off flares in non-emergencies after pyrotechnic was possibly ‘let off as a celebration’An RNLI crew has warned against setting off flares when there is no emergency, after it was called out on Christmas Day for the first time in living memory.Whitby’s all-weather lifeboat launched on Sunday after two members of its team spotted a red flare above the North Yorkshire town’s harbour. Continue reading...
Family of murdered six-year-old call for ‘total reform of social services’
Arthur Labinjo-Hughes’ relatives criticise local child protection service that ignored months of torture and abuseThe family of Arthur Labinjo-Hughes, the six-year-old boy murdered by his stepmother after months of torture and abuse, have said they fear more children will die unless there is “total reform of social services”.Relatives added they were disappointed at the scale of intervention taken since Arthur’s death, particularly after a national review found failures in local child protection reflected national shortcomings. Continue reading...
Evelyn and William De Morgan enjoy surge of interest
De Morgan Museum reopened in Barnsley and gained accreditation status by Arts Council EnglandSixty years ago, they were so unfashionable they were in danger of being forgotten. Today the Victorian artists Evelyn and William De Morgan are having a renaissance with, supporters say, interest never higher.The De Morgan Museum recently reopened in Barnsley after a major refurbishment. In the last few weeks it has been given accreditation status by Arts Council England. This month it also joined the National Gallery in London and the Metropolitan Museum in New York on an app offering online tours. Plus, there are touring exhibitions in the US and UK and displays in Surrey and Wolverhampton. Continue reading...
Call to allow reuse of graves as burial plots run low in England and Wales
Local authorities say they are short of space due to Victorian laws that are also causing rise in funeral costsCemeteries are running out of space to bury the dead, local authorities have warned, prompting calls for an overhaul of archaic legislation to prevent deepening funeral poverty for families.The disposal of human remains is governed by a complex set of legislation in England and Wales dating to the Victorian era, which prevents graves being reused. Continue reading...
‘Planting seeds of peace’: Bosnian war stories are brought to the stage
Susan Moffat and Aida Haughton explain how their play My Thousand Year Old Land was given a universal humanity by using raw, real-life testimonyThree women – Pravda (meaning “justice”), Istina (“truth”), and Nada (“hope”) – sit around a table, grinding coffee and telling stories. Around them on stage are men’s boots, belts and a hat. The men are no longer here but killed in war.It’s what writer and director Susan Moffat calls “the presence of absence”. In the play My Thousand Year Old Land (A Song for BiH), which Moffat wrote alongside Bosnian war survivor Aida Haughton, we follow three women whose lives are changed by the deaths of their communities’ men in the 1990s conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina. They find themselves taking on the typically male roles in the family, from tilling the fields to feeding cockerels. Continue reading...
Zero-hours contracts among over-50s hit highest level recorded
According to ONS data, there are now nearly 300,000 people aged 50 or over in insecure employmentZero-hours contracts among the over-50s have reached their highest level since records began, according to new analysis of official government statistics.There are nearly 300,000 people aged 50 and older with zero-hours contracts, the highest number for this age group since records began in 2013 and almost double the number 10 years ago, from 149,000 in October to December 2013 to 296,000 in July to September 2022. Continue reading...
Wong condemns Taliban’s decision to ban women from NGOs – as it happened
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Labour calls for toughening of Hunting Act and vows to close ‘loophole’
As figures show there have been 438 convictions since 2010, party says it wants to outlaw trail hunting ‘smokescreen’More than 430 convictions for hunting have been secured since 2010, figures reveal amid calls to strengthen the law before this year’s Boxing Day parades.Labour, which introduced legislation to tackle fox hunting in 2004, has vowed to toughen up the Hunting Act to close a “loophole”. Continue reading...
UK retailers face quieter Boxing Day amid cost of living crisis
An estimated £3.8bn will be spent on 26 December, down almost 4% on last yearRetailers are preparing for a quieter Boxing Day this year despite freedom from pandemic restrictions as the cost of living crisis weighs on shoppers’ budgets.Spending is expected to hit almost £3.8bn on 26 December, according to research by GlobalData for Vouchercodes. Continue reading...
Dozens of Chinese warplanes cross Taiwan median line
Beijing says drills also involving navy ships are a ‘firm response’ after US defence spending bill prioritised support for Taiwan
Sales shoppers say Australia’s cost of living crisis drives search for Boxing Day bargains
Consumers are ‘freedom spending’ after an intense year, but on essentials rather than big-ticket items
Austria avalanche: 10 missing skiers found alive, four of them injured
Up to 10 people had been feared buried after incident between Zuers and Lech am Arlberg on SundayTen people initially feared buried under snow after an avalanche swept across ski trails in western Austria have been found, according to authorities.Just before 1am on Monday, police confirmed all the missing had been accounted for, the Austria Press Agency reported. Continue reading...
Australia’s tourism body wants to lift working holiday visa age limit to 50
Lifting age eligibility rules would help attract a wider range of skilled workers and professionals, Tourism and Transport Forum boss says
Activists to revisit controversial ‘Where is Peng Shuai’ protests at January Australian Open
One of the protesters, Drew Pavlou, says they want to ‘make trouble’ for Tennis Australia over its links to China
Putin says Russia ‘ready to negotiate’ over Ukraine as Zelenskiy gives defiant Christmas message – as it happened
Ukraine’s president says Ukrainians are creating their own ‘miracle’ in Christmas address as Russian president accuses Kyiv and western allies of ‘refusing to negotiate’
Seven people with British links arrested in Iran over protests
UK Foreign Office is seeking further information about detainees, who include several dual nationalsSeven people with links to Britain have been arrested by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards over anti-government protests that have snowballed across the country in recent months, according to reports.The people arrested, some of whom are dual nationals, were detained while trying to leave Iran, according to Reuters, citing a statement published by state media. Continue reading...
Suspect in Paris shooting ‘had pathological hatred of foreigners’
The man, 69, was held on Friday after killing three people at a Kurdish cultural centre and nearby cafeThe French man detained over the killing of three Kurdish people in Paris last week has told investigators he had a “pathological” hatred of foreigners, the city’s prosecutor said on Sunday.The 69-year-old man was arrested on Friday after shooting dead two men and a woman in a Kurdish cultural centre and nearby Kurdish cafe in the 10th district of Paris, which the French president, Emmanuel Macron, described as a “vile” attack on the Kurds of France. Continue reading...
Tributes paid to ‘cherished’ Liverpool woman, 22, killed in collision with police car
Family describe Rachael Louise Moore, who died on Christmas Eve, as ‘cherished’ daughter, sister, granddaughter and partnerA 22-year-old woman who died after being hit by a police car on Christmas Eve in Liverpool has been described by her family as a “cherished” daughter, sister, granddaughter, partner and “friend to many”.Merseyside police are appealing for witnesses after being called to reports of a collision involving a marked police car on Saturday at about 8.10pm on Sheil Road in the Kensington area of the city. Rachael Louise Moore died at the scene. Continue reading...
Number of stay-at-home dads in UK up by a third since before pandemic
Lockdown was ‘catalyst for change’, with men now spending more quality time with their children
At least five dead in Spain after bus plunges off bridge into river
Driver and one passenger rescued as search continues for at least one missing person in GaliciaAt least five people have died after a bus fell off a bridge into a surging river in north-western Spain late on Christmas Eve.Emergency teams are searching for at least one missing person, while two survivors – the driver of the bus and a female passenger – were rescued from the Lérez River in Galicia and taken to hospitals, authorities said on Sunday. Police said the driver tested negative for alcohol and drugs. Continue reading...
King Charles’s Christmas message – text in full
Monarch reflects on the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, in first Christmas Day broadcastI am standing here in this exquisite Chapel of St George at Windsor Castle, so close to where my beloved mother, the late Queen, is laid to rest with my dear father.I am reminded of the deeply touching letters, cards and messages which so many of you have sent my wife and myself and I cannot thank you enough for the love and sympathy you have shown our whole family. Continue reading...
King Charles highlights cost of living crisis in first Christmas broadcast
Monarch pays tribute to the volunteers and charity workers helping those in financial difficultyKing Charles has highlighted the cost of living crisis and the “great anxiety and hardship” of many struggling to “pay their bills and keep their families fed and warm” in his first Christmas broadcast.In the message, with the nation in the grip of economic woes and against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine, the king dedicated a major part of his broadcast to those helping to ease the plight of others. Continue reading...
‘We are overjoyed’: the family finally united in the UK after fleeing Yemen
Half the Hareth family obtained visas, but three sons faced years of danger and uncertainty, until they were recognised as refugeesA refugee family have celebrated their first festive season safely together in two and a half years after the Home Office abandoned threats to deport three of them because they arrived in the UK on a small boat.The Hareth family – mother, Ferdowz, and father, Hussein, both 55, Hamzah, 27, Hassan, 25, Hazem, 24, and Azzam, 14, fled war in Yemen, but had very different journeys to the UK and contrasting experiences of dealing with the Home Office even though their circumstances were identical. Continue reading...
Gibraltar: UK police asked to help with inquiry into alleged government corruption
Royal Gibraltar police ask British counterparts to investigate alleged data breach in interests of ‘transparency’UK police have been called in to lead an investigation into a data breach in a public inquiry concerning alleged corruption at the top of Gibraltar’s government.The development is the latest twist in the inquiry, which is to hear explosive allegations by the British overseas territory’s former police chief, Ian McGrail. Continue reading...
Mafia-themed food items sold abroad unacceptable, say Italian farmers
Investigation takes aim at everything from Cosa Nostra whiskey to El Padrino restaurant in Spain and Nasi Goreng Mafia eaterie in IndonesiaItaly’s biggest farmers’ association is waging a battle against the “scandalous” use of mafia terms to sell a variety of food and drink products around the world, from Cosa Nostra whiskey to Chilli Mafia tomato sauce.Coldiretti undertook an extensive investigation and also discovered that almost 300 restaurants beyond Italy have mafia-themed names, including El Padrino in Spain, Don Corleone in Finland, Burger Mafia in Germany, Falafel Mafia in the US and Nasi Goreng Mafia in Indonesia. Continue reading...
Archbishop of Canterbury and Pope Francis call for end to war in Ukraine
Pontiff says world suffering from ‘famine of peace’ as Justin Welby praises example of late monarchThe archbishop of Canterbury and Pope Francis have used their Christmas addresses to call for an end to the war in Ukraine.During his sermon, Justin Welby also spoke of those suffering “immense anxiety and hardship” during the cost of living crisis and made reference to the “desperate struggles of hospital wards”. Continue reading...
Sunak urged to drop ‘unspeakably cruel’ two-child limit and benefit cap
SNP’s Kirsten Oswald says PM should scrap policies, including the controversial ‘rape clause’, to lift 500,000 out of povertyRishi Sunak has been urged to drop “unspeakably cruel” policies in order to lift half a million people out of poverty.The Scottish National party MP Kirsten Oswald has urged the prime minister to U-turn on his decision to back the two-child limit and benefit cap policies set by his predecessors. Continue reading...
Man arrested at Sydney airport and charged over fatal gym shooting
The man was charged with the shooting of Omar Zahed, 39, and Tarek Zahed, 41, at a gym in Auburn, Sydney in May. Omar Zahed died at the scene
‘It can be a difficult time’: Albanese helps to serve Christmas meal for Australians in need
PM spends Christmas morning at Ashfield Uniting Church in Sydney’s inner west along with NSW Labor leader Chris Minns
Boxing Day Test: Victorian fast bowler Scott Boland retains spot over Hazlewood
Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 305 of the invasion
Ten dead and more than 50 injured in Russian strikes on Kherson; ‘We will endure this winter,’ Volodymyr Zelenskiy says in Christmas eve message
Toddler dies after being hit by 4WD at Sydney property on Christmas Eve
Paramedics treated the two-year-old boy but he died at the scene. A man was taken for mandatory testing and is assisting with the police investigationA child has died after being hit by a 4WD at a Sydney property on Christmas Eve.Emergency services were called to Dural in Sydney’s north-west about 6pm on Saturday where they found a two-year-old boy who was critically injured. Continue reading...
Kurdish rapper wins appeal against death sentence in Iran
Saman Yasin had denied charges of attempting to kill security forcesIran’s supreme court has accepted an appeal by rapper Saman Yasin against his death sentence even as it confirmed the same sentence against another protester.Yasin, a well-known and acclaimed Kurdish artist and rapper, has been a vocal critic of the Iranian regime amid the current unrest. He wrote messages of support for protesters on his social media channels and has written several protest songs. Continue reading...
Shortfalls in Australia’s food pesticide residue monitoring raised almost a decade ago
Documents obtained by the Guardian reveal government has no real idea about agricultural chemicals’ impact on environment
Australia and China team up to protest WTO blockages caused by US vetoes on appeal body
More than 100 countries stress ‘the urgency and importance’ of filling appeal judge positions as US continues years-long disruption started by TrumpAustralia has teamed up with China and more than 100 countries to protest longstanding blockages at the World Trade Organization as the United States vetoes appeal judge appointments.Australia and China remain at odds over specific trade disputes between them – such as Beijing’s tariffs on Australian wine and barley – but are united in concern about the years-long disruption to a key appeal body. Continue reading...
Taliban stop women from working for aid organisations
Female employees of NGOs told to stop coming to work in latest move to curtail women’s freedoms in AfghanistanAfghanistan’s Taliban-run administration has ordered all local and foreign non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to stop female employees from coming to work, according to a letter from the economy ministry.The letter, the contents of which were confirmed by economy ministry spokesperson Abdulrahman Habib, said female employees of NGOs were not allowed to work until further notice. Continue reading...
Sussexes dismiss Sun apology for Clarkson column as ‘PR stunt’
Paper’s apology followed piece in which columnist said he ‘hated’ MeghanA spokesperson for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex has said an apology by the Sun over a column in which Jeremy Clarkson said he “hated” Meghan is “nothing more than a PR stunt”.The column has become the Independent Press Standards Organisation’s (Ipso) most complained about article, with more than 20,000 contacting it over the piece, according to Ipso. Continue reading...
Rugby star Rob Burrow’s wheelchair-accessible van vandalised
Vehicle belonging to motor neurone disease fundraiser was targeted on Friday evening in West YorkshireThe former rugby league star Rob Burrow’s wheelchair accessible van was vandalised while his family were out for a Christmas meal, his father has said.Geoff Burrow said his son, who played for Leeds Rhinos between 2001 and 2017, had been out in Castleford, West Yorkshire, on Friday when the vehicle was targeted. Continue reading...
Maxi Jazz, lead singer of Faithless, dies aged 65
Dance group announces death of singer, saying he was ‘a lovely human being with time for everyone’Maxi Jazz, the lead singer of the dance group Faithless, has died aged 65.In a Facebook post on Saturday, the group wrote: “We are heartbroken to say Maxi Jazz died last night. He was a man who changed our lives in so many ways. Continue reading...
UK Border Force strike: armed forces cannot detain people, emails reveal
Exclusive: those covering for staff have no power to stop suspected criminals if they have valid travel documentsSoldiers and sailors covering for striking Border Force staff at passport control do not have the power to detain people they suspect of criminal activity, leaked documents show.Emails reveal that people suspected of crimes such as carrying a false passport, drug smuggling, people trafficking and victims of modern slavery cannot be stopped by members of the armed forces if they hold valid travel documents. Continue reading...
Paris police use teargas on protesters decrying Kurdish centre killings
Hundreds rally after three people allegedly shot by man awaiting trial for refugee camp attackProtesters have clashed with police as they call for justice over the killing of three people in a Kurdish neighbourhood in Paris.Several hundred representatives of France’s Kurdish community gathered at Republic Square on Saturday to demand answers over the killings, which they say have left the community afraid. Continue reading...
‘Do you work in business?’ Sunak mocked for ‘excruciating’ exchange with homeless man
PM filmed asking man if he would like to ‘get in to’ financial services during visit to London shelterRishi Sunak has been criticised over an awkward exchange with a homeless person while volunteering at a soup kitchen in front of television cameras.The prime minister visited a shelter on Friday, where after a brief exchange he asked the man whether he worked in business. The man replied that he was homeless. Sunak then discussed his background in the finance industry and asked if it would be something the man would “like to get in to”. Continue reading...
Partner of Brixton crush victim says someone must be found accountable
Phoebie Turley pays tribute to Gaby Hutchinson, saying they ‘would have done anything for anyone’The partner of one of the people who died after the O2 Brixton Academy crush has demanded justice for the victims of the disaster, insisting someone needs to be “accountable” for what happened.Gaby Hutchinson, 23, died after fans tried to get into a show by the Nigerian artist Asake at the south London venue on 15 December. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak hires journalist James Forsyth as political secretary
Spectator political editor and Times columnist is friend of prime minister’sRishi Sunak has hired a close friend and journalist as a senior political aide as he prepares to focus on immigration, the NHS and education to arrest his party’s slump in support.The prime minister has hired James Forsyth, the political editor of the Spectator, as his political secretary. Continue reading...
White Christmas forecast for parts of Scotland
Met Office warning for snow and ice in place for most of Scottish Highlands and some lowland areasThe Scottish Highlands could be in for a white Christmas, forecasters have said.A Met Office yellow warning is in place for most of the mountainous region and some lowland areas from 9pm on Christmas Day to 6pm on Boxing Day. Continue reading...
Are Americans buying real or fake Christmas trees? Here’s what the data tells us
Wholesale growers expect to increase tree costs between 5% and 15% as research suggests artificial trees gaining popularityFor millions across the country, a Christmas tree is an essential part of the holiday season.And every year comes the debate – an artificial tree or a real one? Continue reading...
‘Serpent’ serial killer Charles Sobhraj returns to France after 19 years in prison
Sobhraj arrives in Paris on commercial flight after release from Nepalese prison on health groundsCharles Sobhraj, a convicted killer known as “the Serpent” who police believe targeted western backpackers on the hippie trail in the 1970s, has returned to France after nearly two decades behind bars in Nepal, BFM TV reported.Nepal’s supreme court ordered the release of Sobhraj on Wednesday, citing his advanced age and health. Continue reading...
Fire in Russian care home kills 22 people
Blaze in Siberian city guts second floor of building housing unregistered home for older peopleTwenty-two people have been killed in a fire at an illegal nursing home in the Siberian city of Kemerovo, Russia’s emergencies ministry said.The fire broke out early on Saturday morning in the two-storey wooden building in the industrial city more than 2,000 miles east of Moscow. Initial reports say it may have been caused by a faulty heating boiler. Continue reading...
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