by Agence France-Presse in Dehradun, India on (#5Z67Y)
Parents lament pilot son ‘still not planning a baby’ after six years of marriage and demand compensation for exhausting their savings on himAn Indian couple are taking their son to court demanding that he and his wife either produce a grandchild within a year or cough up almost $650,000.Sanjeev and Sadhana Prasad say that they exhausted their savings raising and educating their pilot son and paying for a lavish wedding. Continue reading...
Voters engaging with politics in the final weeks of the campaign are searching for basic information like ‘when is the 2022 election in Australia?’, and hoping to find out who is winning
Ministers told to reduce staff in their departments by a fifth overall to free up cash to spend on tax cutsMore than 90,000 civil servants are likely to lose their jobs in an attempt by Boris Johnson to find money to ease the cost of living crisis.The prime minister is understood to have tasked the cabinet with cutting staff by a fifth, telling them every bit of cash saved on government spending could be better used elsewhere. Continue reading...
by Nadia Khomami Arts and culture correspondent on (#5Z5Z9)
Seven decades on from the birth of coronation chicken, a swiss roll-based dessert wins jubilee contestA copywriter’s recipe for a lemon swiss roll and amaretti trifle will become part of British food history after it was awarded the title of “platinum pudding” for the Queen’s jubilee celebrations.Jemma Melvin, 31, from Southport, beat off competition from four other finalists in the Fortnum & Mason platinum pudding competition to take the title. Her trifle follows in the footsteps of coronation chicken, serving as a long-lasting reminder of the 96-year-old monarch’s reign. Continue reading...
President Rodrigo Chaves establishes emergency commission as one of his first acts amid attacks by Russian-speaking gangAfter a month of crippling ransomware attacks, Costa Rica has declared a state of emergency invoking a measure usually reserved to deal with natural disasters or the Covid-19 pandemic to allow the government to react more nimbly to the crisis.President Rodrigo Chaves, who was sworn in on Sunday, made the emergency declaration one of his first acts. It was published on Wednesday, but Chaves has not named the members of the National Emergency Commission. Continue reading...
The new ‘postal drone routes’ will improve the reliability of mail services to remote communities, the company saidRoyal Mail has announced plans to increase its use of drones for deliveries with the creation of 50 new “postal drone routes” over the next three years.Under a partnership with logistics drone company Windracers, and subject to Civil Aviation Authority approval, the move will provide faster and more convenient services for remote communities, Royal Mail said. Continue reading...
Northumbria soars up research excellence framework ratings of 76,000 academics used to divide up £2bn annual fundingBritish universities are producing a greater depth of world-leading research than previously realised, the results of a large exercise examining the output and real-world impact of 76,000 academics in the UK suggests.The findings of the research excellence framework (REF), looking at work produced from 2014–2021, is based on rating nearly 186,000 pieces of academic research, with the results used to divide up about £2bn in annual government funding. Continue reading...
Twenty women have accused Patrick Poivre d’Arvor, also known as PPDA, of sexual harassment and abuseTwenty women have come forward to openly accuse one of France’s best-known television news presenters of sexual harassment and abuse – including rape – following an investigation by French journalists.Patrick Poivre d’Arvor – known as PPDA – has faced a number of accusations that emerged after a writer first went to police to accuse him of rape, in February last year. The investigation was later dropped. Continue reading...
‘Dynamic pricing’ sees ticket costs fluctuate wildly for the acclaimed production’s final performances in the West EndThe West End play Cock has faced criticism for operating a “dynamic pricing” ticketing model that saw the cost of a seat rise to £400.A spokesperson for the show, produced by Elliott & Harper Productions at the Ambassadors theatre in London, said on Tuesday that as Cock was reaching the end of its limited 13-week run, “the remaining premium ticket seats are based on supply and demand”. But after there was astonishment on social media at some of the ticket prices, the cost was considerably reduced on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Lucky ticket-holder matches all seven numbers to become Britain’s biggest National Lottery winnerA claim has been received for the record-breaking £184m EuroMillions jackpot prize won by a single UK ticket-holder on Tuesday, Camelot has said.The lucky ticket-holder matched all seven numbers to win £184,262,899.10, instantly making them the UK’s biggest National Lottery winner. The record was previously held by an anonymous ticket-holder who banked £170m in October 2019. Continue reading...
Minister also refuses to say whether Ukrainians who cross Channel in small boats could be sent to AfricaUndocumented people who travel from the Ukraine to the UK via Ireland could be considered for removal to Rwanda, a senior Home Office official has told MPs.During the same select committee hearing, a minister refused to say under repeated questioning whether Ukrainians who arrive in the UK across the Channel by boat could also be sent to the central African country. Continue reading...
Former firefighter on trial for murder of 92-year-old widow who was found with crumbs in her mouthThe traditional French madeleine – made famous by the writer Marcel Proust as a metaphor for childhood memories – is at the centre of a murder trial this week after a man was accused of using one of the miniature sponge cakes to kill an elderly widow.The 92-year-old woman, Yvette B, was found dead in her bed in the Alzheimer’s unit of a care home in Tours in May 2019 with madeleine crumbs in her mouth. Continue reading...
Footballer’s wife says she sent information on teammate’s arrest for drink-driving to agent on day two of Rooney libel trialRebekah Vardy has confirmed she attempted to leak a story about the arrest of drink-driving Premier League footballer Danny Drinkwater to a journalist at the Sun – but insisted it was a one-off.As part of the ongoing “Wagatha Christie” libel trial, the footballer’s wife said she sent the information on Drinkwater’s night in the cells to her agent Caroline Watt, along with a WhatsApp that said: “I want paying for this x”. Continue reading...
More than 100 women claim they were groped, catcalled and verbally abused during annual Alpini paradeItaly’s defence minister has called for an investigation after more than 100 women reported being sexually harassed during an annual parade held by Italy’s elite mountain troops, the Alpini, last weekend.The women, many of whom were working in bars and restaurants, claimed they were groped, catcalled and verbally abused during the event in Rimini, which was attended by about 75,000 Alpini veterans and serving members. Continue reading...
by Robert Booth Social affairs correspondent on (#5Z3V2)
Charity says mini-referendums to approve bigger extensions will make homes less affordableMini-referendums that allow homeowners to loosen planning rules and build bigger and taller extensions risk doing nothing to increase the supply of affordable housing, campaigners have said.“Street votes” are set to be included in the levelling up and regeneration bill as part of what the housing secretary, Michael Gove, has described as a way to boost democratic involvement in homebuilding. Continue reading...
Rail Car, which Dylan describes as representing ‘perception and reality at the same time’, is installed on tracks in a Provence vineyardBob Dylan’s largest-ever sculpture, of a railway freight carriage, has been unveiled on a French vineyard.The monumental piece, entitled Rail Car, is built from about seven tonnes of iron and installed on train tracks at Château La Coste in Provence. Exposed to the elements, it features motifs of ladders, wheels and tools. Continue reading...
Broadcaster hopes ITVX will help it achieve £750m in digital ad income annually by 2026ITV has warned that it expects an advertising slump over the coming months because of “macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty” and the absence of a major commercial event such as last year’s European football championship.The broadcaster lauded a “robust” start to the year, having grown TV and digital advertising revenues by a healthy 16% year-on-year to £468m in the first three months. Continue reading...
by Martin Chulov Middle East correspondent on (#5Z3S0)
Tributes paid to Al Jazeera journalist and authority on Israeli-Palestinian conflict who has been shot in West BankShireen Abu Akleh, the Al Jazeera correspondent who has been shot and killed in Jenin in the West Bank, was a veteran observer of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, renowned across the Arab world as an authoritative voice on the region’s most contested story.The 51-year-old joint Palestinian and US citizen had reported from nearly every flashpoint in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem over three decades, during which she regularly crisscrossed between both sides telling the stories of Palestinians and Israelis from homes, battlegrounds and the drawing rooms of leaders. Continue reading...
by Denis Campbell Health policy editor on (#5Z3JG)
Products such as soya milk, fruit smoothies and raw vegetables can trigger pollen food syndrome attacksAn “explosion” in a food allergy poses a particular risk to vegans and vegetarians, one of Britain’s leading experts has warned.Cases of pollen food syndrome (PFS) have risen markedly in recent years as a result of global heating, worsening pollution and changes in pollen patterns, Dr Isabel Skypala said. Continue reading...
Critics argue laws are being misused to punish the poor but experts say cases represent country’s failure to care for its most vulnerable citizensAfter pleading unsuccessfully for affordable housing to help ease her chronic health condition, a Canadian woman ended her life in February under the country’s assisted-suicide laws. Another woman, suffering from the same condition and also living on disability payments, has nearly reached final approval to end her life.The two high-profile cases have prompted disbelief and outrage, and shone a light on Canada’s right-to-die laws, which critics argue are being misused to punish the poor and infirm. In late April, the Spectator ran a story with the provocative headline: Why is Canada euthanising the poor? Continue reading...
Israel has said Shireen Abu Akleh may have been hit by Palestinian fireAl Jazeera has accused Israel of deliberately killing one of its reporters during a firefight between Israeli security forces and Palestinian gunmen in the occupied West Bank town of Jenin.Shireen Abu Akleh, 51, a Palestinian American and one of the Arab world’s most well-known reporters, who had covered the conflict for decades, was shot in the head on Wednesday morning and taken to hospital in critical condition. She had been covering a military raid in a northern town and nearby refugee camp, a stronghold of the Palestinian Fatah movement and historical flashpoint in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Continue reading...
Bookings reach 85% of levels seen for summer of 2019 as industry bounces back from Covid pandemicThe travel company Tui Group more than halved its losses over the past six months and is predicting a “strong travel summer” as customers continue to book long-awaited holidays despite cost of living pressures.Europe’s largest holiday company said future bookings remained “unabatedly high” as international travel bounced back from the coronavirus pandemic and had reached 85% of levels seen for the summer of 2019, with the pace picking up in particular over the past six weeks. Continue reading...
Kurangaituku, 'an epic poem of a novel’, won the Jann Medlicott Acorn prize at a ceremony that delivered ‘loads of surprises’A novel subverting a Māori myth has taken home New Zealand’s most prestigious writing prize at this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Awards.Kurangaituku by Whiti Hereaka, which draws on the Māori legend of Hatupatu and the Bird-Woman but tells it from the perspective of the tale’s traditional monster Kurangaituku, has won the $60,000 Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction. Continue reading...
The takeover will add 25,000 pitches and glamping structures to the US website and will enable private landowners to rent out rural spaceThe British camping brand Cool Camping has been taken over by a large US company, Hipcamp, which aims to bring its Airbnb-style model of campsite booking to the UK.From today, all 25,000 camping pitches and glamping structures on Cool Camping’s website will be listed instead on Hipcamp. Continue reading...
Australia’s minimum wage is shrinking compared to median pay, bucking global trendsThe recent spurt in inflation has little do with with workers being paid more, economists say, warning the claim that wages increases could set-off inflation is ‘over-the-top alarmism’.Debate over how much the lowest-paid workers should receive has flared during the election campaign after the ACTU this week raised its minimum wage claim to the Fair Work Commission to 5.5% from an earlier goal of 5%, after March-quarter consumer prices spiked. Continue reading...
Lloyds Bank Foundation report warns that payment cuts of up to 25% to recoup advances or settle debts leave people relying on food banksA mechanism allowing universal credit payments to be cut by up to 25% is driving people into poverty and debt, a report by the Lloyds Bank Foundation has found.Cuts to benefits are often to recoup advances given during the set-up period and to settle outstanding debts – but they are not means-tested. Here, one person tells how it has affected them: Continue reading...
London mayor, a frequent target for Trump, says level of racial abuse on social media required him to receive police protectionFrom a stage in the heart of Silicon Valley, London mayor Sadiq Khan called on tech companies to rein in hate speech, speaking about his own experience of abuse amplified by one of the most powerful figures on social media.He was referencing Donald Trump, who frequently used the mayor as an online punching bag, calling Khan “a stone-cold loser” and “very dumb”. Khan, whose family are from Pakistan, said the amount of racial abuse he received on social media increased by 2,000% under Trump and required him to receive police protection. Continue reading...
by Samantha Lock (now); Maanvi Singh, Joanna Walters, on (#5Z24F)
This blog has now closed. You can find our latest coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war in our new live blogThe Ukrainian MP Valentyn Nalyvaichenko, a former head of the security services in the country, has been interviewed on Sky News in the UK from Kyiv. He said that yesterday “we saw again the Victory Day madness in Moscow”. He told viewers:The same day in Ukraine, in the city of Odesa, the city of Mykolaiv, Russians shelled our cities, our civilians. In Putin’s speech we did not hear any news, any good news for anybody, for us, for the whole world. It’s still the same Soviet kind propaganda. Conducting a war on our soil because of this “Russia’s motherland”. It sounds really like madness, especially on Victory Day.How can we use civilians as a shield when the Russian Black Sea fleet, the Russian Caspian Sea fleet are shelling missiles, Kalibr and others, against civilians? There is no protection.The war will continue until Vladimir Putin wants to stop it. We understand any night in any city we can expect shelling at any minute, any hour. That is Putin’s responsibility and his decision. Continue reading...
Prime minister Jacinda Ardern also announces shakeup of immigration to attract skilled workers back to the countryNew Zealand will fully reopen to the world two months earlier than originally planned, prime minister Jacinda Ardern has announced as part of a wider shake-up to immigration settings.The country swiftly closed the border in March 2020 to prevent the arrival of Covid-19. It has just started reopening to some non-New Zealand citizens and residents over the past few months – beginning with Australians and followed by travellers from 60 visa-waiver countries. Continue reading...