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Updated 2025-07-18 08:15
Singapore appeal court upholds death sentence for intellectually disabled man
Execution of Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam, who has IQ of 69, upheld despite claims it goes against international lawA man with learning disabilities who has spent more than a decade on death row could face execution within days after Singapore’s top court dismissed his last-ditch appeal, in a case that has drawn global condemnation.Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam, a Malaysian national, was arrested in 2009 for attempting to smuggle 43 grams of heroin – about three tablespoons –into Singapore.
P&O Ferries rejects plea from Grant Shapps for U-turn on sackings
Ferry firm’s boss says complying with minister’s request would cause company’s collapseP&O Ferries has rejected the government’s call to move this week’s deadline for the 800 sacked workers to accept redundancy offers, saying most had already signed contracts and ministers were “ignoring the situation’s fundamental and factual realities”.In a bullish response to transport secretary Grant Shapps, the ferry operator’s chief executive, Peter Hebblethwaite, said the demand was legally impossible and would close the firm down. Continue reading...
Australia’s budget is banking on wages outpacing inflation and interest rates, but not by too much
Coalition is relying on an assumption budget handouts such as fuel excise relief won’t fan inflation
Evacuation orders lifted for parts of Lismore – as it happened
This blog is now closed. Follow the latest updates from the 2022 Australian federal budget here.
Boris Johnson must resign if fined for breaching lockdown, says Labour
Angela Rayner increases pressure on PM with Met expected to issue first tranche of fines imminentlyBoris Johnson should resign if he is fined by the Metropolitan police for lockdown breaches, despite the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Labour has said, after the Guardian revealed the first tranche of fines are expected to be issued imminently.It is understood the Met is expected to issue about 20 fines on Tuesday related to the most straightforward cases, though more are expected to follow. A source said the fines would probably be imposed on “low-hanging fruit” – an indication that Boris Johnson is unlikely to be among them, as he has denied breaking the law. Continue reading...
‘We have to be seen to be believed’: the endurance of the royal tour
For the British monarchy the global jaunt is key to maintaining precious media coverage – even if it is dull, or worse, embarrassingRoyal tours have long been a central feature of monarchical life. It’s what they do. As the Queen says: “We have to be seen to be believed.”Medieval monarchs toured their realms obsessively in order to show they were still alive. It also helped keep their populations in order and allowed them to display their magnificence and power. Henry II’s legs grew bandy as he rode continuously across France, England and Ireland in the 12th century. Elizabeth I’s tours, 400 years later, wended their way round the country: she spoke to ordinary folk encountered en route and accepted gifts from the burghers of the towns that she and her 300-wagon baggage train passed through. Continue reading...
Future of Covid memorial wall still uncertain one year after the first heart
What began with a team of volunteers in London has become a symbol of the pandemic – but remains at risk of erasureA year ago today, Fran Hall drew a small red heart on the wall of the Albert Embankment alongside St Thomas’ hospital and opposite the the Houses of Parliament.Within the heart, she wrote the name Steve Mead, the husband she lost to coronavirus in October 2020 just three weeks after they married. Continue reading...
Ben Roberts-Smith defamation trial: former soldier objects to answering questions about SAS missions
Soldier anonymised as Person 66 objects to questions in federal court over missions under Roberts-Smith’s command on the grounds of self-incriminationA former Australian soldier has objected to answering questions about SAS missions under the command of Ben Roberts-Smith in Afghanistan in 2012, his lawyer telling the federal court his expected evidence could tend to incriminate him in an alleged murder.The soldier, anonymised before the court as Person 66, briefly began giving evidence late on Monday, subpoenaed to give evidence by the newspapers defending a defamation action brought by his former comrade and Victoria Cross recipient Roberts-Smith. Continue reading...
‘We took our children and ran’: thousands displaced as Senegal’s 40-year-war crosses border
More than 6,ooo people have left their homes as renewed violence in the Casamance region spills into the GambiaIt was late morning when the bullets burst through the corrugated roof of Maimouna Kujabee’s farmhouse. First, she hit the ground. Then she took off, running from her village in Ziguinchor, in Senegal’s Casamance region, as fast as her children could manage.Through fields and forest, with only the clothes on her back, Kujabee did not stop until she reached Bajagar, in the Gambia, about a mile north of the border. “The sun was hot. I ran until my sandals were cut up,” says Kujabee. Continue reading...
Abramovich and Ukrainian MP may have been poisoned this month
Russian billionaire and Rustem Umerov had symptoms consistent with poisoning earlier in March, says source
Man who stabbed neighbour had told police: ‘I will murder him’, jury told
Can Arslan killed Matthew Boorman in Gloucestershire village after ‘long-running’ dispute, court hearsA man stabbed a neighbour in a Gloucestershire village 27 times the day after telling a police officer: “I will murder him”, a jury has been told.Can Arslan, 52, killed father-of-three Matthew Boorman and seriously wounded his wife, Sarah Boorman, as she tried to fight him off, before forcing his way into the home of another neighbour, Peter Marsden, and knifing him eight times. Continue reading...
Oscars ratings up 50% on last year but still second worst in history
Changes made to the format this year may have increased viewership but the program still struggled to attract an audienceThe 2022 Oscars drew more viewers than last year’s record-low ceremony, but still fell well below prior years as award shows struggle to attract primetime attention.The nearly four-hour telecast drew 15.36 million viewers according to time-zone-adjusted fast national numbers from Nielsen, Variety reported on Monday. The audience figures show a 56% improvement over the 2021 ceremony, which drew an all-time low of 10.4 million viewers and prompted the Academy and ABC to shake up the program in an attempt to woo more viewers. Continue reading...
Massacre at cockfight in Mexico leaves 20 dead
Gunmen with assault rifles burst into event in western state of Michoacán long plagued by violence between drug cartelsMexican authorities have confirmed that 20 people were killed when a group of gunmen stormed a cockfight, in a small town in the western state of Michoacán.Officials and witnesses described a choreographed massacre in which assailants in military uniforms arrived just after 10.30pm on Sunday night and opened fire with assault rifles at the crowds of primarily middle-aged men. Continue reading...
Sunak says spring statement is ‘progressive’ in response to criticism from MPs
Chancellor called ‘fiscal illusionist’ for pledging tax cuts while driving up burden and not doing enough to help poorest
‘Violence instead of words’: Will Smith condemned for hitting Chris Rock at the Oscars
Bernardine Evaristo, Keir Starmer, Kathy Griffin and others respond to incidentAuthor Bernardine Evaristo is among the public figures to have condemned Will Smith for hitting Chris Rock at the Oscars, saying the actor “resorted to violence instead of utilising the power of words”.In what quickly became the bombshell moment of the ceremony, Smith struck Rock in the face after the comic made a joke about Smith’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith. Continue reading...
UK set to criminalise illicit refugee crossings after ministers avoid Commons rebellion
Government wins string of votes to restore elements of controversial borders and nationality bill removed by LordsThe UK appears set to criminalise illicit refugee crossings and could ship asylum seekers for processing in other countries after ministers easily saw off a potential rebellion in the Commons over the controversial borders and nationality bill.Despite a number of Conservative backbenchers expressing concerns about aspects of the bill, the government convincingly won a string of votes to restore elements changed in the House of Lords, including the idea of Australian-style third country processing. Continue reading...
Cadbury family-size Dairy Milk bars get 10% smaller but price stays the same
US parent Mondelez blames higher production costs and inflation as 200g bar shrunk to 180gCadbury has slashed the size of its family-size bars of Dairy Milk by 10% as the nation’s favourite chocolate falls prey to “shrinkflation”.The confectionery company has announced it is passing on rapidly rising production costs to customers, with US-based parent company Mondelez blaming inflation. Continue reading...
Kremlin disrespecting families as it stalls return of own dead, says Zelenskiy
Ukrainian president criticises Russian authorities for not agreeing on scheme to have remains sent home
Cressida Dick to leave Met police earlier than planned, says Priti Patel
Home secretary says deputy commissioner Sir Stephen House will cover until successor appointedCressida Dick’s tenure as the Metropolitan police commissioner will end next month, the government has said, with continued wrangling over a payoff and an inquiry announced into why she decided to resign.The home secretary, Priti Patel, announced Dick’s five years as Britain’s top police officer would end in April, with the process to find a replacement to pull the Met out of crisis expected to start imminently. Continue reading...
Sheku Bayoh: officers refused immunity for inquiry into death in custody
Inquiry will examine whether death in 2015 in Kirkcaldy was avoidable, and whether Bayoh’s race affected police actionsScotland’s police force and its prosecution authority have refused to give 12 police officers immunity from criminal charges in an inquiry into the death in custody of Sheku Bayoh.Police Scotland’s deputy chief constable, Fiona Taylor, has told the judge chairing a public inquiry into Bayoh’s death in Kirkcaldy in May 2015 that officers are under a legal and professional duty to tell the truth, regardless of the risks of self-incrimination. Continue reading...
Will Zelenskiy’s interview with Russian media make a difference in war?
Ukraine president gave interview with five prominent Russian journalists – but how many in the country will see it?
Plans for England’s schools include national behaviour survey
Package of measures in schools white paper aims to improve standards and lift attainmentMinisters are to launch a new national behaviour survey as part of its plans to improve standards and lift attainment in schools in England.It is one of a package of measures outlined in a schools white paper unveiled on Monday, which also includes ambitious new attainment targets for all primary and secondary pupils across the country. Continue reading...
William and Kate: what matters is better future for people of Commonwealth
Royal couple say they are ‘committed to service’, which is not ‘telling people what to do’, at end of Caribbean tourThe Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have insisted they are interested only in a “better future” for the Commonwealth, not in who leads it, at the end of their tour of the Caribbean.William said foreign tours were an “opportunity to reflect” and he and his wife were committed to “serving and supporting” the people of the Commonwealth, not “telling them what to do”, in a statement published on the couple’s Twitter account. Continue reading...
Troy Kotsur wins best supporting actor Oscar for Coda
Kotsur becomes the second deaf actor to win an Oscar, for his role in the film about the child of deaf parents, by Sian Heder• Follow all the action with our liveblog
Councils allowed to set up academy trusts in shake-up of schools system
White paper could pave way for independent regulator, while ‘parent pledge’ dismissed as gimmickPlans to redraw England’s schools system will allow councils to establish their own academy trusts and give schools the opportunity to leave failing ones.The policies are set out in a schools white paper to be published on Monday and include a “parent pledge” for families to request additional support for their children, which has been dismissed as a “gimmick” by school leaders. Continue reading...
Stop charging migrant women for NHS maternity care, RCOG urges
Exclusive: Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists says policy is harming health of pregnant women and babiesThe Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists has called for the immediate suspension of charging for NHS maternity care for migrant women because members say this government policy is harming the health of pregnant women and their babies.The RCOG has urged the government to change its policies towards charging some migrant women for maternity care and to carry out an urgent review of how maternity care is provided to the group. It is the first time the health professionals’ body has issued a position statement on this issue. Continue reading...
Michael Grade faces tough questions over fitness to lead Ofcom
MPs vetting peer’s appointment as chair of media regulator raise impartiality and business concerns• ‘If I am appointed,’ says the QC in line for charity commissioner. He will be (Opinion, Rupa Huq)Concerns are growing over the government’s plan to install Conservative peer Michael Grade as the next chair of media regulator Ofcom, amid questions over his impartiality and past business record.Grade faces a pre-appointment hearing in front of the Commons digital, culture, media and sport committee of MPs this week before finally being approved for the role. MPs on the committee are understood to have concerns about the 79-year-old’s suitability to oversee the regulator. Continue reading...
Trapped and destitute: how foreign nurses’ UK dreams turned sour
Lawyers and unions condemn scandal of international health workers forced to pay out if they quit their jobs early• Overseas nurses in the UK forced to pay out thousands if they want to quit jobsWhen Laura Sanchez was offered a job as a nurse in the NHS, it sounded like the opportunity of a lifetime.At home in the Philippines, she had seen Facebook ads similar to those on the site today, promising “an attractive relocation package” and inviting her to “Start your UK dream!” Continue reading...
Kim Carr bows out after three decades as Labor senator for Victoria
Veteran cites death of Kimberley Kitching and ‘determined urgings’ from his children as reasons for his decision to step down
Sydney commuters to get free public transport for 12 days in April
Scheme is an attempt by NSW government to revitalise city centre and compensate for February train shutdown
UN condemns attacks by Yemen rebels and Saudi-led coalition
UN chief António Guterres calls for ‘restraint’ on all sides in seven-year conflictUN chief António Guterres on Saturday condemned an exchange of attacks between Yemen’s Houthi rebels and the Saudi-led coalition, calling for “restraint” on all sides in the seven-year conflict.“The secretary-general strongly condemns the recent escalation of the conflict in Yemen,” UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said in a statement Saturday. Continue reading...
‘Open the schools’: Afghan girls protest in Kabul for right to education
Two dozen girls and women react to Taliban’s decision to shut secondary schools to girls across AfghanistanWomen and girls staged a protest near the Taliban’s ministry of education in Kabul on Saturday, calling on the group to reopen girls’ secondary schools in Afghanistan.The protesters chanted: “Education is our right – open the doors of girls’ schools!” as armed Taliban members looked on. They held banners that said: “Education is our fundamental right, not a political plan” as they marched for a short distance. They dispersed when Taliban fighters arrived at the scene later. Continue reading...
Ministers to make school week a minimum of 32.5 hours in England
Unions and Labour criticise plan that is among suite of changes to be set out on MondaySchools in England will have to offer a minimum school week of 32.5 hours as part of a package of reforms aimed at raising standards, which Labour and unions have condemned as insufficient to support schools that have been left “battered and bruised” by the pandemic.
Shropshire maternity scandal: 300 babies died or left brain-damaged, says report
Five-year investigation to conclude mothers forced to suffer traumatic births because of targets for ‘normal’ birthsThree hundred babies died or were left brain-damaged due to inadequate care at an NHS trust, according to reports.
Cardi B beats lawsuit over alleged defamation during parking feud
Judge dismisses plaintiffs’ claim over tweeted video, saying insults by rapper’s sister did not qualify as defamationThe rapper Cardi B has beaten a lawsuit filed against her by three beachgoers who claimed they had been defamed during an altercation over parking.A lawsuit filed in New York last year alleged that the singer’s sister, Hennessy Carolina, and Carolina’s girlfriend, Michelle Diaz, had blocked the plaintiffs in. Continue reading...
Prisoner escapes custody wearing just underwear and socks
Police are searching for Kyle Darren Eglington, 32, who absconded from a court prisoner transit vanPolice are searching for a prisoner who escaped custody wearing just his underwear and socks.Kyle Darren Eglington, 32, absconded from a court prisoner transit van in Poole after assaulting security officers on Saturday morning, Dorset police said.
Hundreds of boaters join London protest against ‘cull’ of waterway life
Boat dwellers stage demonstration about new moves by the Canal & River Trust to restrict mooring spacesHundreds of boaters converged in west London’s Little Venice area on Saturday to protest about what they say is a “cull” of a traditional way of life along the capital’s waterways.The boat dwellers staged a demonstration about new moves by the Canal & River Trust (CRT), a charity which manages the waterways in England and Wales, to restrict mooring spaces in some parts of the capital and to issue enforcement notices against some who officials say are mooring their boats in the wrong areas. The CRT began issuing enforcement notices in January of this year. Continue reading...
Vladimir Putin ‘cannot remain in power’ Joe Biden says in Warsaw speech
US president casts Ukraine war as continuation of long struggle for democracy against Russian brute forceVladimir Putin “cannot remain in power”, US president Joe Biden said in Warsaw on Saturday in a speech addressing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.However, a White House official said soon after the speech that Biden was not calling for regime change in Russia. Continue reading...
Australian scientists solve mystery of moment monotremes migrated
Fossil analysis is shedding new light on the origins of egg-laying mammals and their arrival on the continent
News of the World publisher fails in bid to end phone-hacking claims
Rupert Murdoch’s News Group Newspapers asked for litigation to be brought to an end 15 years after scandal brokeThe publisher of the News of the World has failed in its attempt to force a deadline on potential victims of the phone-hacking scandal to make claims against it.Rupert Murdoch’s News Group Newspapers (NGN), which published the now defunct newspaper as well as the Sun, asked for litigation to be brought to an end 15 years after the scandal broke. Continue reading...
Tamils fear prison and torture in Sri Lanka, 13 years after civil war ended
The threat of a bullet in the leg or having his fingernails ripped off was the ordeal faced by one manThe sun had barely risen the morning that the military turned up for Vijay*. Grabbing him from his home in a village in the Northern Province of Sri Lanka while his pregnant wife and baby lay asleep next to him, they blindfolded him and drove him deep into a jungle.For the next 12 hours, in a small dark shack away from prying eyes, they interrogated Vijay. Pliers were repeatedly brandished, with threats that his finger nails would be removed if he did not give the army officers the information they wanted. Continue reading...
Revealed: top 10 children’s care providers made £300m profits
Concern at growing role of private equity as councils struggle to meet spiralling costsThe 10 largest providers of children’s social care placements made more than £300m in profits last year, according to research that will fuel concerns over profiteering by private providers.As pressure mounts within government, regulators, councils and fosterers over the provision of care for the country’s most vulnerable children, analysis seen by the Observer reveals the growing role of private equity companies in many of the biggest suppliers of care home and fostering places. Continue reading...
‘It keeps me calm’, says Kharkiv chef cooking to cope with Ukraine war
Alone in his high-rise flat, Igor Mezencev has found hope through childhood recipes and helping to coordinate food supplies• Russia-Ukraine war: latest updatesBefore the war, Igor Mezencev loved to go into the forest with Ukraine’s best chefs, equipped with just four ingredients – salt, sugar, vinegar and oil – and try to cook high cuisine in the wild.Now, with his city, Kharkiv, under heavy bombardment, Mezencev is confined to his high-rise flat. But using whatever ingredients he can find, he has continued to cook and invent – baking bread from untoasted buckwheat groats, cooking on his balcony and revisiting childhood recipes. He says this has helped him to cope with the terror of the shelling and airstrikes. Continue reading...
Thousands gather in London to show solidarity with Ukraine
Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, says people of British capital stand ‘shoulder to shoulder with Ukraine in its darkest hour’
Russia scales back its military ambitions but the war in Ukraine is far from over
Last week’s announcement that Putin’s forces were limiting operations to the Donbas and their mission was nearly complete is merely a shift in emphasis
Biden offers further military support to Ukraine as Russian troops falter
US president risks wrath of Putin over pledge to provide ‘further defence cooperation’ during Poland visit
Taal volcano: thousands flee after eruption in Philippines
Residents ordered to leave homes as ash and steam sent hundreds of metres into skyThousands of people fled their homes near a Philippine volcano after an eruption sent ash and steam hundreds of metres into the sky.Taal volcano, which sits in a picturesque lake south of Manila, exploded with a “short-lived” burst at 7:22 am on Saturday, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said in a statement. Continue reading...
Neighbours tell of shock at fatal stabbing of woman in east London
Woman stabbed to death in Bethnal Green while her two children were at school described as ‘a lovely person’Neighbours have told of their shock and sadness after a woman was stabbed to death while her two children were at school.Those who knew the 40-year-old from Bethnal Green in east London said she was “a lovely person” and that she had lived in the area for a long time. Continue reading...
William Morris’s ‘heaven on earth’ Oxfordshire home restored to former glory
After a £6m renovation project, the pioneering designer’s farmhouse is reopening to the publicFor William Morris, the Oxfordshire village of Kelmscott was “heaven on earth”. An old farmhouse became a beloved rural retreat and inspiration for the pioneering designer, author, architectural conservationist and social reformer, widely regarded as the father of the arts and crafts movement.Now Kelmscott Manor, near Lechlade, is reopening to the public on 1 April following a £6m renovation project, preserving and enhancing it for future generations. Continue reading...
Caribbean: William suggests monarchy will respect any decision to become republic
Leaders of Bahamas, Jamaica and Belize present as duke says ‘we respect your decisions about your future’
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