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Updated 2026-03-28 08:15
Labour win in Wakefield proves party is ready for power, says Starmer
Simon Lightwood elected as MP in symbolic victory in ‘red wall’ seat won by Conservatives in 2019
Shireen Abu Aqleh killed by ‘seemingly well-aimed’ Israeli bullet, UN says
Al Jazeera journalist not hit by indiscriminate firing from Palestinians, as initially claimed by Israel, it foundThe UN said on Friday that its findings showed that the shot that killed the Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Aqleh on 11 May was fired by Israeli forces.The Palestinian-American journalist, who was wearing a vest and helmet marked “press”, was killed while covering an Israeli army operation in Jenin in the northern West Bank. Continue reading...
James Watson sentenced to life for 1994 murder of Rikki Neave
Watson, 41, evaded detection for over 20 years, changing his account as evidence against him piled upA 41-year-old man has been sentenced to life with a minimum term of 15 years for the murder of the schoolboy Rikki Neave, who was found strangled in woods near Peterborough almost 28 years ago.James Watson, of no fixed abode, was convicted in April at the Old Bailey in London of the 1994 murder after a DNA breakthrough in 2016 revealed that, as a 13-year-old, he had been in physical contact with the six-year-old boy on the day of his disappearance. Continue reading...
Tories lose two key byelections on same night in Wakefield and Tiverton and Honiton
Labour takes Wakefield and Lib Dems snatch Tiverton and Honiton, piling pressure on Boris Johnson
Judith Neilson’s daughter and lawyer join institute’s board after directors quit in protest
Billionaire’s plans to change direction of the media-focused organisation she funded sparked board unrest
Why the west risks condemning Ukraine to slow strangulation
Before war fatigue sets in further, a rethink needed to avoid a years-long conflictSpeaking at a private dinner in London recently, a senior serving British military officer argued the west had no choice but to see Ukraine as just one phase in a decade-long battle with Russia. “If Ukraine wins, Russia will never accept that. If Russia wins, it will go further,” he warned.Yet in Whitehall they fear the “F word” – fatigue – and worry that the west with its TikTok-attention span and bias towards instant gratification does not have the resolve for the years-long sacrifice required to defeat Russia, or even stem the military tide in the villages of eastern Ukraine. Continue reading...
Scammers are targeting customers of collapsed energy suppliers, study shows
Looking to exploit the cost of living crisis, fraudsters are posing as debt collectors acting on behalf of victimsScammers are attempting to exploit the cost of living crisis by targeting consumers whose energy supplier has collapsed, analysis by Which? has found.Former customers of bust suppliers including Solarplicity, Future Energy and Northumbria Energy have been singled out by fraudsters attempting to exploit the confusion caused by the companies’ failures, the consumer group said. Continue reading...
Barr feared Trump might not have left office had DoJ not debunked fraud claims
Former attorney general says ‘I am not sure we would have had a transition at all’ if investigation had not immediately taken placeDonald Trump’s attorney general, William Barr, thought Trump might have refused to leave office at all had the Department of Justice not immediately investigated and disproved his lies about electoral fraud in his defeat by Joe Biden.“I am not sure we would’ve had a transition at all,” Barr said, in startling video testimony played by the January 6 committee on Thursday. Continue reading...
Nigerian politician accused of trying to bring boy, 15, to UK to harvest organs
Ike Ekweremadu and wife Beatrice Nwanneka Ekweremadu appear in court in London after Heathrow arrestA Nigerian politician and his wife have been charged with plotting to traffic a homeless 15-year-old boy to Britain to harvest his organs.Ike Ekweremadu, 60, an opposition senator and former deputy senate president, and his wife, Beatrice Nwanneka Ekweremadu, 55, appeared at Uxbridge magistrates court in west London on Thursday. Continue reading...
Pope Francis orders online release of second world war-era ‘Jewish’ files
Vatican archive of 2,700 cases of requests for help by Jewish people renews debate on Pope Pius XII legacyPope Francis has ordered the online publication of 170 volumes of files relating to Jewish people from the recently opened Pope Pius XII archives, amid renewed debate about the legacy of the second world war-era pope.The archive of 2,700 cases “gathers the requests for help sent to Pope Pius XII by Jewish people … after the beginning of Nazi and fascist persecution”, said the Vatican’s secretary for relations with states, Paul Richard Gallagher, in a statement. Continue reading...
Scottish islanders save US couple’s wedding after their luggage gets lost
Amanda and Paul Riesel were about to give up on their dream after nightmare three-day trip to SkyeIt was a perfectly imperfect wedding that has won the Scottish island of Skye an international reputation for kindness.Amanda and Paul Riesel flew more than 4,000 miles from Orlando, Florida, to get married on Skye, in the Highlands. Continue reading...
UK offers expertise in escort of Ukraine grain to avert starvation in Africa
Liz Truss and Turkish foreign minister meet to discuss safe passage for convoy under UN plan
‘Unwanted junk’: Earth Goddess statue prompts unholy reaction in St Austell
Artist Sandy Brown hopes people will grow to love sculpture described as ‘something out of Teletubbies’Towering above a square in the Cornish town of St Austell, it is the tallest ceramic sculpture in the UK and possibly the world, a south-west of England answer to the Angel of the North.But the installation this week of Earth Goddess, which is as high as two double decker buses on top of each other, has provoked a reaction commensurate with its scale. Continue reading...
Climate justice groups join British rail strike picket lines
Campaigners say government must invest in public transport to avoid worst impacts of global heatingClimate justice groups have joined RMT picket lines across the UK to support the rail strike and argue the government must invest in public transport to avoid the worst impacts of global heating.Hundreds of activists from several groups including Just Stop Oil, War on Want, Extinction Rebellion [XR] and Friends of the Earth Scotland have joined striking workers on more than 40 picket lines in towns and cities across the country, with more expected to turn out in the coming days. Continue reading...
Brexit is working and naysayers have axes to grind, claims David Frost
UK’s former chief negotiator launches staunch defence of Brexit on sixth anniversary of EU referendumBrexit is working and anyone who says it has hit the economy and trade has an axe to grind, the former Brexit negotiator David Frost has said on the sixth anniversary of the UK voting to leave the EU.Lord Frost stopped short of painting a picture of “sunny uplands” but said official figures used to predict a 4% decline in output caused by Brexit were “zombie” numbers, based on academic studies of former communist countries, and not fact. Continue reading...
Nadhim Zahawi: axing Larkin and Owen poems for GCSE is cultural vandalism
Education secretary denounces exam board’s decision to replace two poets in English literature courseShelley said “poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world”, but politicians may be more powerful after the education secretary attacked the removal of poems by Philip Larkin and Wilfred Owen from a GCSE course as “cultural vandalism” and called for their reinstatement.Nadhim Zahawi denounced a decision by the OCR examination board to replace two works by Larkin and Owen from next year with a more diverse range of authors to be studied as part of its GCSE English literature course. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson rules out ‘crazy’ idea of quitting if Tories lose byelections
PM dismisses suggestion he should step down if his party loses Wakefield and Tiverton & Honiton byelections
The Fisherman’s Hut: inside the luxury Russian dacha linked to Vladimir Putin
Exclusive: Leaked emails reveal complex with marble floors, a private brewery and a $10,000 bidet
Surrogate girl, 6, loses battle to list her father on UK birth certificate
Child’s case argued that practice of naming surrogate mother’s husband breached her human rightsA six-year-old British girl who was born to a surrogate mother using an anonymous donated egg and sperm from her biological father has lost her case in the European court of human rights to have her father named on her birth certificate.In a complex case where five people were involved in her birth – a same-sex male couple, one of whom is her biological father, a surrogate mother and her husband and the anonymous egg donor – the European court of human rights ruled the case was “manifestly unfounded”. Continue reading...
Deputy premier James Merlino among senior Victorian Labor MPs set to retire
Merlino and ministers Martin Foley, Lisa Neville and Martin Pakula could announce their retirements Friday
Aung San Suu Kyi moved to solitary confinement in jail, says Myanmar junta
Ousted leader, held in secret location for past year, facing charges that have been decried as politically motivatedAung San Suu Kyi has been moved to solitary confinement inside a prison compound in Myanmar’s capital, Naypyidaw, according to a junta spokesperson.Myanmar’s ousted leader, who is 77, has been held by the military since 1 February last year, when it ousted her democratically elected government, plunging the country into chaos. Continue reading...
Staffer felt ‘traumatised’ after working with Craig Kelly adviser Frank Zumbo, court hears
Young woman tells court her years in the office were ‘awful’ and says she only felt safe after moving interstate
Australia’s fruit and vegetable shortages to continue for six weeks as impact of floods and cold weather bites
Farmers federation says supply levels should return to normal in September, though distribution issues could persist
‘Completely bloody-minded’: NSW unions furious over fine increases for illegal strikes
Government moves to dramatically lift fines following months of industrial disputes with a range of public sector workers
Covid rapid antigen test supplier rejects allegations by TGA of ‘serial non-compliance’
Hough Pharma says it ‘continually provided efficacy, safety and variant data’ to TGA and prides itself on customer service
Royal Mail marks 50 years of UK Pride with colourful set of stamps
March in London on 1 July 1972 was first with the name ‘Gay Pride’, inspired by events in USOn 1 July 1972 a crowd of people gathered in London’s Trafalgar Square and marched to Hyde Park chanting “Gay is fun! Gay is proud! Gay is beautiful!”.It was not the first march for LGBTQ+ rights in the UK, as similar protests had taken place in Highbury Fields, Islington, in 1970 and Trafalgar Square in 1971. But it was the first rally in the UK with the name “Gay Pride”, inspired by Pride events in the US. Continue reading...
Brexit remains ‘open wound’ for EU citizens living in UK
Survey of EU nationals shows ‘profound and lasting’ impact of Brexit on sense of identityA study of EU citizens living in the UK has revealed the “open wound” left by Brexit, with respondents saying the decision to leave the bloc had left them feeling betrayed, insecure and distrustful towards the country that most nonetheless still call home.The survey of EU nationals from 22 countries, who had mostly been in Britain for more than five years and stayed since Brexit, showed “a profound and lasting impact on the lives and sense of identity and belonging of EU citizens in the UK”, the authors said. Continue reading...
Vienna reclaims title of the world’s most livable city
Annual rankings return Austria’s capital to first place, as former title-holder Auckland tumbles to 34th and Ukraine war sees eastern cities slumpThe Austrian capital, Vienna, has made a comeback as the world’s most livable city, according to an annual report from the Economist.Vienna snatched the top spot from New Zealand city Auckland, which tumbled down to 34th place due to coronavirus pandemic restrictions, according to the report by the Economist intelligence unit published on Thursday. Continue reading...
French MP sued for allegedly adopting aristocratic family’s name
Emmanuel Taché de la Pagerie, a member of Marine Le Pen’s far-right party, faces legal action by descendants of the Tascher de la Pagerie familyA newly elected MP for Marine Le Pen’s resurgent far-right National Rally party has been sued by the descendants of one of France’s oldest aristocratic families who accuse him of adding their name to his own.Emmanuel Taché de la Pagerie, 47, was one of dozens of National Rally MPs voted into the National Assembly on Sunday, with his official ID verified and approved by the local authorities in the southern city of Marseille. Continue reading...
Shayna Jack’s golden swimming comeback cut short by freak injury at worlds
Finland’s armed forces chief says his country is prepared for a Russian attack and ready to fight – as it happened
This live blog is now closed, you can find our latest coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war hereOne of the leaders of the authorities imposed in occupied Ukraine has described the border between Russia and Ukraine as “worse than the Berlin Wall for the Germans”, according to a report from RIA Novosti.It quotes Vladimir Rogov saying:For us, the border with Russia is worse than the Berlin Wall for the Germans. According to various estimates, 60-68 per cent of the inhabitants of East Berlin and the German Democratic Republic [East Germany] had relatives in West Berlin and the Federal Republic of Germany [West Germany]. In Ukraine, depending on the region, 73-85 percent residents have relatives in Russia. Accordingly, this border should not exist. Continue reading...
Students show ‘shocking growth in support for censorship’, ministers warn
Survey reveals many students value safety, compassion and avoidance of discrimination above free speechMinisters have warned that students are showing “shocking growth in support for censorship” after a survey revealed that many favoured safety and avoidance of discrimination over unrestrained free speech.The survey by the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) found that current students are more likely to support measures that restrain freedom of speech or expression on campus, and approve of removing offensive materials and memorials, compared with their predecessors six years ago, when it last conducted the survey. Continue reading...
English schools warn of acute teacher shortages without ‘inflation plus’ pay deal
Figures show impact of pay on recruitment as unions tell education secretary to compensate for inflation or face strikesSchools in England say they face an acute crisis over retention and recruitment without a significant pay increase, as the country’s biggest teaching union warned of strike action this autumn without an “inflation plus” deal.The threat came as new research shows that every 1% increase in pay gives a 2% boost to graduate recruitment in high-demand disciplines such as science, maths and technology. Continue reading...
S Club 7 star calls out ‘lack of empathy’ for gambling addicts
Jo O’Meara recalls her issues with fruit machines and says addiction ‘can happen to anybody at any time’Jo O’Meara, a former member of the 90s pop group S Club 7, has shared how she became addicted to gambling on fruit machines as a “form of escape” from the pressures of touring, before realising she had to quit because it made her antisocial.O’Meara said she first went to bingo halls with family at about 18, where she began playing on fruit machines. Although she did not consider it an addiction at the time, she found herself playing regularly over five years before deciding, she said, that “the gambler never wins” and she was “wasting valuable time which would be better spent with friends and family”. Continue reading...
Ministry of Sound to convert House of Fraser store into gym and offices
Nightclub group says new venue at west London shopping centre will host ‘fitness raves’Ministry of Sound is to “remix” a former House of Fraser store in west London as flexible offices, a gym and rooftop bar-restaurant.The owner of the nightclub, which first launched a members’ club with flexible workspace and a gym in 2018 near its original south London venue, is expected to open its second site at Westfield shopping centre in Shepherd’s Bush in 2024. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson and Prince Charles to hold Rwanda talks
Pair are visiting for Commonwealth meeting, after Charles criticised government’s asylum policyBoris Johnson will have a potentially awkward meeting with the Prince of Wales in Rwanda after the heir to the throne criticised the government’s policy of sending asylum seekers to the east African state.The talks will take place at the Commonwealth heads of government meeting (Chogm) in Kigali this week. Prince Charles reportedly described the government’s plan to fly people 4,000 miles on a one-way ticket as “appalling”. Continue reading...
PM avoids denying he attempted to get Carrie Johnson top Foreign Office job
MPs look at whether watchdogs could investigate the claims after Boris Johnson refused to comment during PMQsMPs are looking at whether the foreign affairs watchdog or ethics officials in the Cabinet Office could investigate Boris Johnson’s proposal to give a senior job to his then girlfriend in 2018, after the prime minister refused to deny having done so.Johnson fuelled speculation that he attempted to install Carrie Johnson, now his wife, as his chief of staff when foreign secretary after he declined to comment on the allegations at prime minister’s questions. Continue reading...
Macron says parties must cooperate after he loses control of parliament
France’s president seeks to form a working majority despite Le Pen’s far-right party being main oppositionLeaders of France’s opposition parties all agree on the need to avoid political gridlock and must now learn to compromise, Emanuel Macron said on Wednesday, as he faces the biggest crisis of his career and unprecedented political deadlock after losing control of parliament.In his first comments since his centrist grouping fell more than 40 seats short of an absolute majority in parliamentary elections on Sunday, Macron said that agreements needed to be found across party lines and that he would seek over the next weeks to establish a working majority. Continue reading...
Bristol couple jailed for enslaving 29 Slovakian people
Maros Tancos, and Joanna Gomulska forced vulnerable people to work unpaid at car washA couple have been jailed for a total of 25 years after trafficking at least 29 vulnerable people to the UK and forcing them to work for free at a car wash and live in a property described as the “gate to hell”.Maros Tancos, and Joanna Gomulska, both 46, kept the victims as “prisoners” in squalor in the house in Bristol and subjected them to beatings and death threats, a court heard. Continue reading...
Finns are ready to fight any Russian attack, says its armed forces chief
Gen Timo Kivinen says Nato applicant is prepared and motivated to defend against neighbour and would be ‘tough bite’ to chewFinland has prepared for decades for a Russian attack and would put up stiff resistance should one occur, its armed forces chief said.The Nordic country has built up a substantial arsenal. But aside from the military hardware, Gen Timo Kivinen said, a crucial factor is that Finns would be motivated to fight. Continue reading...
UK office in charge of Russia sanctions has just 70 staff, says director
Office is overseeing surge of Russia-related sanctions to more than 1,400 after invasion of UkraineThe UK’s sanctions enforcement office has been trying to introduce the “most extraordinary package of sanctions ever implemented” in UK history with a group of just 70 staff, its director has admitted.The head of the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI), Giles Thomson, told MPs on the Treasury committee on Wednesday that his small team had been expected to oversee potential breaches of Russia-related sanctions despite the number of Moscow-related designations having surged from about 220 to more than 1,400 after the invasion of Ukraine. Continue reading...
Widower wins right to have baby using embryo created with his late wife
Landmark ruling allows Ted Jennings, 38, to use embryo to have child via a surrogateA 38-year-old widower has won a landmark legal case giving him the right to have a baby with a surrogate using the last remaining embryo created with his late wife.Ted Jennings and his wife, Fern-Marie Choya, had spent years trying to have children and had sought fertility treatment, but Choya died suddenly while pregnant with twin girls in 2019. The fertility regulator, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), rejected Jennings’s request to be able to use their last frozen embryo to start a family because Choya had not given written consent for posthumous surrogacy. Continue reading...
‘I thoroughly enjoyed it’: man sits GCSE maths exam at 92
Derek Skipper says he ran out of time on paper but ‘it doesn’t matter two hoots about the result’A 92-year-old man is thought to have become the oldest person to sit a GCSE exam, after he completed a maths paper alongside a school hall full of 16-year-olds.Derek Skipper took the exam at Comberton village college near Cambridge after completing a free online course that involved him using YouTube for the first time. He needed to use a magnifying glass to read the paper due to his poor eyesight, and said he ran out of time before the end, but was still hopeful for a level 4 or 5 result. Continue reading...
Air traffic control union warns overtime burden may lead to airspace closures
Airservices Australia denies there is any shortage of controllers, despite struggle to fill shifts
Isolated Afghanistan may face struggle for aid after earthquake
Analysis: humanitarian appeals for Taliban-ruled country have had poor responses and there are sanctions complicationsAs Afghanistan reels from a powerful earthquake and starts to bury its more than 1,000 dead, the Taliban leadership in Kabul have already appealed to the international community to clear any barriers created by sanctions and come to their aid.“The government is working within its capabilities,” tweeted Anas Haqqani, a senior Taliban official. “We hope that the International Community & aid agencies will also help our people in this dire situation.” Continue reading...
Windrush generation ‘moved to tears’ as monument unveiled in London
Basil Watson’s sculpture at Waterloo station celebrates pioneers who arrived in Britain after second world warMembers of the Windrush generation have been “moved to tears” by a new national monument that pays tribute to their ambition, courage and contribution to Britain, the artist behind the sculpture has said.Basil Watson’s permanent monument to the Windrush pioneers who arrived in Britain after the second world war was unveiled at Waterloo station in London on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Nine in 10 people refused asylum in 2020 free to remain in UK
Exclusive: Home Office criticised as figures show 3,632 applicants were turned down and 314 returnedNine in every 10 people who were refused asylum by the Home Office two years ago were free to remain in the country, an analysis has found.The disclosure has fuelled claims that Priti Patel’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda is failing to address fundamental problems in the asylum system such as removals. Continue reading...
Pupils make it to Windrush event after evacuation from stuck train
Party of 48 pupils and their teachers waited on train for almost three hours en route to Royal Festival HallAlmost 50 primary school children who took part in a Windrush event in central London had to be evacuated from a train en route after being stuck in a carriage for almost three hours.The party of 48 year five pupils and their teachers from Hatcham Temple Grove free school in Nunhead, south-east London, almost missed the chance to perform at Royal Festival Hall because of the delay. Continue reading...
Tory MP David Warburton faces parliamentary standards inquiry
Warburton had whip suspended in April after allegations of sexual harassment and cocaine useDavid Warburton, the MP for Somerton and Frome, is facing an inquiry by the parliamentary standards commissioner.The Conservatives suspended the whip from Warburton in April after a series of allegations emerged concerning sexual harassment and cocaine use. Continue reading...
Russia bears down on Lysychansk, targeting police and judicial buildings
Moscow’s troops move on to city neighbouring Sievierodonetsk, after capturing all but chemical plant there
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