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Updated 2025-07-09 00:15
Central Coast man charged with murdering mother after he allegedly hit her with a pot plant
Tumbi Umbi man, 56, arrested after 82-year-old found dead with head injuries in their home
Awarding $248,000 in legal costs would be a ‘windfall’ for Shane Bazzi, Peter Dutton warns
Opposition leader and refugee activist are in a dispute over costs after Bazzi won defamation case in full federal court
Rishi Sunak pledges to double number of foreign offenders deported
Tory leadership candidate says current system too soft but rival Truss camp says plan is unworkableRishi Sunak has unveiled another new policy in the battle between the Conservative leadership candidates to be tougher on immigration, promising that as prime minister he would double the number of overseas offenders who are deported each year.In a plan immediately criticised by his rival Liz Truss’s camp as unworkable, the former chancellor said he would change the deportation rules so that overseas nationals convicted even of relatively minor crimes such as shoplifting could be deported. Continue reading...
Rights groups hit out at Macron decision to host Mohammed bin Salman
Saudi crown prince accused of complicity in murder of Jamal Khashoggi is welcomed in ParisHuman rights campaigners have hit out at Emmanuel Macron’s decision to host Mohammed bin Salman for talks in Paris during the Saudi crown prince’s first visit to Europe since the murder nearly four years ago of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi.On Thursday evening, Macron welcomed Prince Mohammed to talks at the Elysée Palace with a long handshake before the pair were due to dine together. Continue reading...
Commonwealth Games open with celebration of host Birmingham
A raging bull, Malala Yousafzai, a Brummie drag queen and Duran Duran all part of opening ceremonyWith a 10-metre-tall raging bull, a union jack made from 72 cars, and an appearance by Malala Yousafzai, the Commonwealth Games kicked off on Thursday night with an unashamedly loud celebration of everything Birmingham.Crammed with references to the host city’s history and culture, the two-and-a-half-hour opening ceremony marked the start of Britain’s biggest multisport event since the London Olympics. Continue reading...
Tavistock gender identity clinic is closing: what happens next?
Analysis: as NHS shuts London clinic for young people, new regional hubs are planned – but thousands remain on waiting listsWhen the Gender Identity Development Service for Children and Adolescents (GIDS) at the Tavistock and Portman NHS trust in London was established in 1983, it was a different era in terms of the medical understanding of gender dysphoria and the cultural debate around appropriate treatments for transgender young people.The demand for the service was unrecognisable for what it is today: in the past decade alone, the number of referrals to the GIDS went from 138 in 2010-11 to 2,383 in 2020-21. Continue reading...
Up to 70 Labour MPs may join pickets as Starmer faces test of party unity
Union source claims MPs will join BT staff on Friday despite Labour leader’s call for frontbenchers to stay awayUp to 70 Labour MPs could join union picket lines on Friday as Keir Starmer faces a renewed battle to maintain party unity over support for striking workers.One shadow minister was believed to be considering joining a Communication Workers Union (CWU) picket line as thousands of BT staff began two days of strikes over pay, which would set up a fresh potential conflict with the Labour leader’s office. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: 75,000 Russians killed or injured so far, says US – as it happened
This live blog has now closed, you can find our latest Ukraine war coverage hereKirill Stremousov, deputy head of the Russian-imposed military-civilian administration in the occupied Kherson region of Ukraine has posted to Telegram this morning to say that “all stories about successful ‘Ukronazi’ counter-offensives in the Kherson region are sheer lies.”He offered no evidence to support the claim.Educational institutions and residential buildings were damaged by rocket attacks today. Russian terrorists are cynically shelling the civilian infrastructure of Mykolaiv.Another city school was almost completely destroyed. Part of the building collapsed there. The security guard of the institution was injured. Windows and roofs were broken in nearby private houses. Continue reading...
Bristol lapdancers celebrate council vote to keep clubs open
‘We’re screaming for joy’: activists hail decision, but others condemn failure to tackle ‘sexist culture that underpins male violence’There were passionate speeches, barbed exchanges, tears and laughter – hardly the usual fare at a meeting of Bristol city council’s licensing committee.But most committee members could not help but smile when performers from the city’s two lapdancing clubs greeted their decision not to shut down the venues with whoops and cheers. Continue reading...
Iran may eventually get its way in protracted power struggle in Iraq
Analysis: Kurdish officials are considering allying with Iranian interests to finally form a government in BaghdadA parliament besieged by protesters, a country adrift nine months after an election, a feud between domestic blocs and Iranian proxies: for many Iraqis, the latest political crisis is nothing new.But to many observers this standoff appears more complex and protracted than most over more than two decades of efforts to root a democratic state in Iraq. From the Kurdish region in the north, through Anbar province in western Iraq and to the Shia communities in the south, there appears little hope that a government pursuing a collective national interest can emerge from the power struggle. Continue reading...
Archie Battersbee’s parents fail in life support bid to supreme court
Hollie Dance and Paul Battersbee wanted justices to bar doctors from stopping treatment until they had time to apply to the UNThe parents of 12-year-old Archie Battersbee, who was left in a comatose state after suffering brain damage, have failed to persuade the supreme court to intervene in a life support treatment battle.Archie’s mother and father, Hollie Dance and Paul Battersbee, had asked supreme court justices to give them more time to carry on their fight. Continue reading...
Diageo sales up 20% amid thirst for ‘super-premium’ spirits
International market for scotch, tequila and Chinese spirits grows as customers trade up to more expensive brandsDrinkers have been filling their glasses with “super-premium” spirits, boosting the annual sales of the drinks firm Diageo by a fifth, as the return to bars and restaurants after the pandemic continues apace.Brands such as Don Julio tequila, Johnnie Walker whisky and Casamigos – the tequila company co-founded by George Clooney – highlighted consumers’ growing taste for “super-premium plus brands”, the company said, even at a time of rising prices and a squeeze on incomes. Continue reading...
NHS to close Tavistock gender identity clinic for children
Tavistock and Portman trust’s clinic to shut, with two services set up in hospitals in London and north-west EnglandThe NHS is shutting down its gender identity clinic for children at the Tavistock and Portman NHS foundation trust after it was criticised in an independent review.Regional centres will be set up to replace the service and “ensure the holistic needs” of patients are fully met, NHS England said, after being warned that only having one provider was “not a safe or viable long-term option”. Continue reading...
Leiland-James Corkill: key information not shared before murder, report finds
Cumbrian boy might not have died had agencies collaborated better, investigation concludesInformation about drinking, debts and mental health that could have prevented a baby boy being placed with an adopting mother who went on to murder him was not shared between agencies, an investigation has concluded.It also found that when the mother told social workers she was struggling to bond with the child, not enough support for the family was put in place. Continue reading...
‘An insult’: huge profits at Shell and Centrica cause outrage amid soaring energy bills
News of billion-pound profits comes after UK households warned average annual bill could hit £3,850 by 2023Soaring profits at the energy companies Shell and Centrica have been described as an “insult” to millions of people struggling with the cost of living crisis, with high oil and gas prices funding multibillion-pound rewards for their shareholders.A day after millions of households were warned that average annual energy bills could hit £3,850 from January, triple the level at the beginning of this year, two of the UK’s biggest energy companies sparked outrage with their bumper profits. Continue reading...
Staff at England’s biggest exam board to strike over pay
Union and AQA disagree about possibility of GCSE and A-level results being delayed by the actionTrade union members at England’s biggest exam board will start a 72-hour strike over pay tomorrow, raising the prospect of delays to GCSE and A-level results.AQA said it expected 65 staff members to walk out – representing 5% of the workforce – and insisted the action would not stop results arriving on time, which is the exam board’s “priority”. Continue reading...
Spanish Gypsy groups call for protection after families flee racist mob
Killing of doorman in Andalucían town triggered rampage in which houses were burned and lootedSpanish Gypsy groups are calling for urgent action and protection after dozens of people were forced to abandon their homes in a small Andalucían town when a killing triggered a wave of racist violence.In the early hours of Sunday 17 July, a 29-year-old pub doorman called Álvaro Soto was stabbed to death in Peal de Becerro after an argument with four members of the local Gypsy community. The alleged attackers were later arrested. Continue reading...
UK in diplomatic standoff over deletion of abortion rights from gender statement
Exclusive: Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands refuse to sign edited version, drawing up new phrasing including women and girls’ sexual and reproductive rightsThe UK government is in a diplomatic standoff with three European countries over a statement on gender equality that it changed to remove commitments to women’s reproductive and sexual health rights.Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands are refusing to sign the edited version unless their concerns “are taken into consideration”, a spokesperson for the Dutch foreign ministry told the Guardian on Thursday. Continue reading...
Travel operators demand action, not blame, over cross-Channel delays
Eurocamp executive says more passport capacity needed, after Port of Dover gets just one-thousandth of the Brexit funding it requestedAs holidaymakers continued to face long delays in Dover this week, travel industry insiders have called for an end to the “blame game”. Tens of thousands of families saw the start of their summer holidays ruined last weekend as the roads approaching the Kent port were gridlocked, causing delays of several hours.Demand for cross-Channel sailings is expected to surge in the coming days, leading to fears of more disruption. Ferry operator DFDS is urging passengers to allow two hours to complete the check-in process. Continue reading...
Frasers snaps up I Saw It First as it builds online fashion portfolio
Sale comes after purchase of Missguided and earlier acquisition of Studio RetailMike Ashley’s Frasers Group has snapped up I Saw It First, its second acquisition of an online fast-fashion specialist in as many months.The company said I Saw It First – which was founded and controlled by Jalal Kamani, brother of the Boohoo boss Mahmud Kamani, in 2017 – had more than 5 million shoppers and would “benefit from the strength and scale of Frasers Group’s platform”. Continue reading...
Liz Truss revives promise to build Northern Powerhouse Rail
Tory leadership frontrunner commits to building Liverpool-Hull line, nine months after government scaled back plansLiz Truss has committed to building Northern Powerhouse Rail if she becomes prime minister, nine months after her government radically scaled back plans for a high-speed line across the north of England.The Tory leadership frontrunner said the multibillion-pound coast-to-coast line, stretching from Liverpool to Hull, was “absolutely crucial for the future of the north of England”. Continue reading...
Russian forces fire barrage of missiles at northern Ukraine from Belarus
Strikes hit Chernihiv region as well as locations outside Kyiv and around city of Zhytomyr, say officials
Australia news live: scathing audit of $1.15bn regional fund finds grants favoured Coalition seats
‘Shit area, shit house’: Queensland police officer allegedly told not to waste time investigating woman’s death, inquiry hears
Survey of 53 QPS officers revealed ‘prettier’ domestic violence victims more likely to receive attention from police, inquiry hears
Labor announces national security law review after inquiry criticises secrecy of Witness J case
Report describes ‘unprecedented’ secrecy that ‘should not have happened and should never happen again’
‘Shocking’ sexism and harassment in Australia’s film industry, report finds
Study reveals women more experienced but paid less, while Oscar-nominated cinematographer Ari Wegner calls findings ‘confronting’
Stroke patients in England missing out on ‘miracle treatment’, warns report
Tens of thousands of patients to miss ‘gamechanging’ treatment unless NHS improves access, says charityTens of thousands of stroke patients in England are being denied access to a “miracle treatment” that pulls them back from “near death”, putting lives at risk and leaving many unnecessarily disabled, a report warns.More than 47,000 patients will miss out on mechanical thrombectomy on the NHS over the next seven years unless NHS England and ministers take immediate action, according to the new study by the Stroke Association. Continue reading...
Emails reveal Stuart Ayres involved in recruiting for New York trade role awarded to John Barilaro
Exclusive: Documents obtained through parliamentary order show NSW deputy Liberal leader helped produce shortlist of candidates
Blake Bailey, biographer accused of harassment and rape, to publish memoir
Bailey’s book on Philip Roth was pulled after former students said he abused themThe author of a Philip Roth biography that was taken out of print by its original publisher last year after allegations that he raped multiple women and groomed his former middle school students for sexual encounters when they were older is gearing up to publish a book billing itself as a warning tale of so-called cancel culture.Blake Bailey’s latest work is scheduled to be printed by the controversial Skyhorse Publishing, which picked up his Roth book and an earlier memoir after WW Norton took it out of print and pledged to donate money to sexual abuse organizations equaling the advance it had paid to the biographer. Continue reading...
Chris Bryant to say sorry to billionaire over money-laundering claims
Labour MP will make court apology to financier Christopher Chandler over Commons comments he later tweetedThe Labour MP Chris Bryant is to make a formal court apology to a billionaire financier he accused in parliament of money laundering, after being sued for repeating the claims in a tweeted letter.In a highly unusual legal case, Bryant was taken to court by Christopher Chandler, a New Zealand-born investor and co-founder of a London-based thinktank, over comments initially made during a debate in the House of Commons in 2018, during which another MP accused Chandler of links to Russian intelligence Continue reading...
US to distribute 800,000 doses of monkeypox vaccine after weeks of delay
Announcement comes amid growing criticism that authorities have acted too slowly to fight infectious diseaseAfter weeks of delays, nearly 800,000 doses of the monkeypox vaccine will soon be available for distribution, US health regulators said on Wednesday.Also on Wednesday, it was reported that the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) plans to make the rapidly spreading disease a nationally notifiable condition, a move that would streamline reporting of cases. Continue reading...
‘She’s delusional’: Roundhay voters on Tory leadership contender Liz Truss
As Leeds prepares to host hustings, residents of leafy suburb where Truss grew up take issue with her claims about the areaAs Leeds prepared to host the first of the Conservative leadership regional hustings on Thursday evening, people who grew up alongside candidate Liz Truss have found much to disagree with her on.Truss went to Roundhay school, an Ofsted “outstanding” comprehensive in the leafy suburb in the north of the city. She caused outrage and indignation among local leaders with her comments about her former school, which she said “let down” children. Continue reading...
‘Imprudent’ priest uses inflatable mattress as altar during mass in sea
Father Mattia Bernasconi apologises for any offence after failing to find shade while on camp in southern Italy with high school studentsA priest who celebrated mass in the sea using an inflatable mattress as an altar has been placed under investigation by Italian authorities.Father Mattia Bernasconi, 36, from the archdiocese of Milan, said he had planned to hold Sunday’s ceremony among the trees by the beach in Crotone, southern Italy, after he had been helping with a week-long summer camp for high school students organised by Libera, an anti-mafia organisation. Continue reading...
Australia still failing to hit more than two-thirds of Closing the Gap targets, new data shows
Minister for Indigenous Australians says more is needed to address systemic disadvantage as data shows four of 13 targets on track
Love Island draws 1,500 complaints to Ofcom over alleged misogyny
Media regulator deciding whether to investigate ITV reality show over behaviour of male contestants towards womenLove Island viewers have made 1,509 complaints to the media regulator Ofcom over allegedly misogynistic behaviour by male contestants towards their female counterparts.Viewers were upset by a Snog, Marry, Pie challenge, in which the show’s participants revealed who they would kiss, marry or hit in the face with a cream pie. The dancer and model Tasha Ghouri was left in tears over comments that Dami Hope and Luca Bish made before delivering a pie to her face. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine live news: Ukraine attacks key Kherson bridge in bid to isolate Russian forces
Kyiv’s forces seek to disrupt major Russian supply route through Antonivskiy bridge in bid to retake Kherson
Tom Daley condemns homophobia across Commonwealth ahead of Games
Gold-medallist’s comment comes ahead of opening ceremony in Birmingham on FridayThe Olympic diver Tom Daley has condemned homophobia across Commonwealth nations ahead of the start of competition in the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham on Friday.Daley, who won gold at the event in 2018, said: “Thirty-five out of the 56 Commonwealth member states criminalise same-sex relations. That’s half the countries in the world that outlaw homosexuality. Continue reading...
Germany accuses Russia of ‘power play’ as gas pipeline supply drops by half
State-run Gazprom reduces flow through Nord Stream 1 to around 20% of its capacity
Lloyds lays bare impact of soaring inflation on everyday customers
Families spending on average £89 more a month on energy, food and fuel than before pandemic, says bankFamilies are spending an average of £89 more a month on energy, food and fuel than they were before the pandemic, Lloyds Banking Group said in a financial update, as it laid bare the impact of surging inflation on everyday customers.Lloyds’ chief executive, Charlie Nunn, said about 20% of the bank’s customers had had to adapt their spending “significantly” to rising prices, forcing them to refrain from purchases such as white goods and computers. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war latest: what we know on day 154 of the invasion
Ukrainian forces strike Antonivskiy Bridge in Russian-occupied Kherson to disrupt Moscow’s supply routes
Outrage in Brazil as Jair Bolsonaro avoids five charges related to Covid response
Senators call for investigation into top prosecutor after charges against president shelvedBrazilian senators are calling for an investigation into one of the country’s top prosecutors after she shelved several charges against President Jair Bolsonaro for his mishandling of the Covid-19 pandemic.A damning congressional inquiry had recommended that Bolsonaro be charged with nine offences, including crimes against humanity and charlatanism, for promoting false treatments such as hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin. Continue reading...
Democrats introduce bill requiring term limits for US supreme court justices
The measure would also provide for an appointment every two years but any such reforms are vigorously opposed by RepublicansUS House Democrats have introduced a bill to establish term limits for supreme court justices, after an unprecedented term in which the highest court produced a series of deeply conservative rulings upending American law.In June, a court dominated 6-3 by Republican appointees overturned the right to abortion. It also issued consequential rulings on gun control, the environment and other controversial issues. Continue reading...
Oldham mill fire may have claimed a second victim, say police
Searchers find further human remains in ruins of Bismarck House Mill, where four Vietnamese men are feared deadPolice searching the remnants of a fire-wrecked mill in Oldham have recovered further human remains, which indicate a second victim.Demolition workers came across human remains on Saturday, two days after police received reports that four Vietnamese men were missing and may have been involved in a fire. Continue reading...
Manchester police struggling to recruit detectives because of long hours
Greater Manchester police forced to use agency supplying retired detectives to bridge gapsOne of the UK’s biggest police forces is suffering a detective shortage and is pulling investigators out of retirement to help solve crimes.Greater Manchester police (GMP) is struggling to recruit young people who want to become detectives because of the job’s poor work-life balance compared with other policing roles, its chief constable said. Continue reading...
Morad Tahbaz has been freed from jail in Iran on electronic tag, UK says
Foreign Office confirms British-Iranian man is at home in Tehran and officials are working to free him permanentlyMorad Tahbaz, the British-Iranian man held in a Tehran prison, has been released on an electronic tag, the UK Foreign Office has confirmed.He had been due to be released on a tag at the same time as Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe and Anoosheh Ashoori were allowed to return to the UK in March, but he was only allowed to return to his mother’s home in Tehran for a few days before he was sent back to Evin prison. Continue reading...
England’s Euro 2022 win over Sweden draws peak TV audience of 9.3 million
Women’s 4-0 triumph one of the most-watched broadcasts of the year, BBC One figures showEngland’s Euro 2022 semi-final triumph over Sweden attracted a peak audience of 9.3 million viewers on BBC One, making it among the most-watched television broadcasts of the year.The figures do not include the many viewers who will have watched using the BBC’s online streams, or in public spaces such as pubs or fanzones. The audience were rewarded with a comprehensive 4-0 victory at Bramall Lane, featuring Alessia Russo back-heeling the ball into Sweden’s goal. Continue reading...
Grant Shapps rules out meeting with rail unions as strikes halt most trains
Shadow minister defying Labour leadership to stand on picket line says lives are at stakeGrant Shapps has escalated the government’s confrontation with the rail unions by ruling out meeting with them, as a shadow minister said “lives could be lost” if wages did not improve.Labour’s Sam Tarry defied his party leadership to stand on the picket line at Euston on Wednesday morning while rail strikes disrupted travel for millions. Continue reading...
BBC presenter Nicky Campbell says he was victim of abuse at school in 1970s
61-year-old says what he saw and experienced at Edinburgh Academy has ‘stayed with me all my life’The BBC presenter Nicky Campbell has claimed he was the victim of abuse at a Scottish private school during the 1970s.Campbell, 61, said witnessing incidents of both sexual and physical abuse at the Edinburgh Academy had had a “profound effect on my life”.In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Association for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. Continue reading...
Cost of living 2022: see how inflation has changed prices in Australia in the June quarter – interactive
Use this data explorer to see which goods and services are getting cheaper or more expensive in different Australian cities
Air pollution is ‘likely’ to raise dementia risk, find UK government experts
Cognitive decline in older people more likely to be accelerated by exposure to emissions, finds review of 70 studiesAir pollution is likely to increase the risk of developing dementia, a government research group has said.The Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollutants has published its findings after reviewing almost 70 studies which analysed how exposure to emissions affect the brain over time. Continue reading...
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