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Updated 2026-02-07 17:45
Russia steps up Azovstal siege as freed civilians reach Zaporizhzhia
Volodymyr Zelenskiy says 156 people managed to escape Mariupol while Red Cross says many are still trapped at steelworks
Depp’s attorneys rest after 13 days of testimony in case against Heard
Amber Heard’s attorneys demanded judge dismiss defamation case but Judge Penney Azcarate ruled trial will proceed
Scott Morrison warns overly powerful Icac could turn Australia into ‘public autocracy’
Labor, which has promised to establish a national anti-corruption commission ‘with teeth’, says the PM’s comments show his ‘true colours are emerging now’
Complaints over Covid disruption rose in 2021, student watchdog says
Office of Independent Ajudicator received more than 1,000 complaints in England and Wales related to pandemic measuresUniversity students’ complaints about the Covid pandemic disrupting their studies led to more than 1,000 appeals to the higher education watchdog in England and Wales last year.The Office of the Independent Adjudicator (OIA) received a record 2,763 appeals from students unhappy at the way their complaints had been handled by their universities in 2021. More than a thousand of those were related to the effects of campus Covid measures, treble the number in the first year of the pandemic. Continue reading...
Civil servants called UK Covid testing scheme ‘unlegit’, court hears
Details of emails released in Good Law Project challenge to awarding of contracts to Abingdon Health for antibody testsCivil servants described the government’s Covid testing programme as “unlegit” and “no way to do business” in emails revealed in a high court challenge to the awarding of up to £85m in contracts for antibody tests.The campaigning organisation Good Law Project (GLP) is challenging the health and social care secretary, claiming the contracts with Abingdon Health, a medium-sized UK firm, were unlawful because they were not advertised nor open to competition, and the correct procurement process was bypassed. Continue reading...
Nezam Salangy found guilty of murdering and burying his wife
Salangy’s brothers were also convicted alongside him of helping to cover up the murder of Zobaidah SalangyA pizza shop owner has been convicted of murdering his wife and burying her body in an unmarked grave that police did not discover for more than six months, despite extensive searches.Nezam Salangy, 44, was found guilty at Worcester crown court of killing 28-year-old Zobaidah Salangy, his wife of eight years, on 28 March 2020 then burying her in woodland near Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, under cover of darkness. Continue reading...
Erosion of abortion rights gathers pace around the world as US signals new era
A leaked supreme court draft ruling shows the US is set to end 50 years of a woman’s right to choose. Elsewhere, the battle still ragesIn 2022, abortion remains one of the most controversial and bitterly contested ethical and political battlegrounds. It is illegal for women to terminate their pregnancies in any circumstance in 24 countries, with a further 37 restricting access in any case except when the mother’s life is in danger.As a leaked document signals that the US supreme court is poised to strike down the landmark 1973 ruling in Roe v Wade, millions of American women face losing their access to legal abortions, joining millions more living in those countries rejecting a woman’s right to choose. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson’s GMB interview shows ‘narcissistic’ PM ‘out of touch’, says Labour – UK politics live
This live blog is now closed. For the latest live news, follow our Ukraine war live blog
European Council president ‘confident’ of imminent sanctions on Russian oil
Pivot by Germany bolsters support for phased-in import ban as Charles Michel says goal is to ‘break Russian war machine’
Russia accuses Israel of backing ‘neo-Nazis’ in Kyiv as diplomatic row grows
Moscow hits back at Israeli criticism of Sergei Lavrov’s claim that Adolf Hitler ‘had Jewish blood’
Protesters rush to supreme court to decry draft abortion ruling ‘disgrace’
Pro-choice campaigners light candles and vent fury at Justice Alito, author of leaked opinion, as anti-abortion activists celebrate
Drone carrying guns into Canada from US intercepted after crashing into tree
Police in Port Lambton, Ontario called after device carrying shopping bag of guns flew into tree and operator fled in vehiclePolice in Canada have intercepted a drone which crossed the border from the United States carrying a shopping bag with nearly a dozen handguns – but only after the pilot crashed the device into a nearby tree.Officers in southern Ontario were called to a home near the town of Port Lambton, north-east of Detroit after residents reported seeing a stranger maneuvering a commercial drone. Continue reading...
Teenager accused of UK terror plot took photos of police station, court told
Luke Skelton, 18, allegedly carried out ‘hostile reconnaissance’ and believed he was engaged in a race warA teenager said to have lionised Hitler and who allegedly believed he was part of a race war against “totalitarian” liberal democracy has gone on trial accused of preparing to commit a terrorist act.Luke Skelton, 18, is alleged to have carried out “hostile reconnaissance” of Forth Banks police station in Newcastle upon Tyne. Continue reading...
BP profits double to $6.2bn, fuelling calls for energy windfall tax
Results are ‘obscene’, say unions, after soaring oil and gas prices help company to beat forecastsBP’s profits more than doubled to $6.2bn (£5bn) in the first three months of the year, the highest quarterly profit in more than a decade, helped by soaring oil and gas prices.Analysts had expected a figure of $4.5bn and the higher profit has renewed calls by campaigners for a windfall tax on oil and gas companies. Continue reading...
Man found guilty of threatening ‘traitor’ Labour MP with noose
Lance O’Connor confronted Hove MP Peter Kyle outside parliament with makeshift gallowsA man has been found guilty of threatening a Labour MP after he held a makeshift gallows with a noose outside parliament and said: “This is what we do to traitors.”Lance O’Connor, 57, called out the name of the Hove MP, Peter Kyle, as he walked across Parliament Square in central London on 20 October last year, Westminster magistrates court heard on Tuesday. Continue reading...
In an election budget, Victorian treasurer Tim Pallas is fighting a war on many fronts
Analysis: To fight his way back to surplus, Pallas relies on economic growth rather than spending cuts or increased taxes
Lyra McKee’s sister says Sinn Féin letter leak exploits her murder for politics
Nichola McKee-Corner brands leaking of exchange, allegedly between Sinn Féin and Saoradh, an exploitation of Lyra’s murderThe sister of Lyra McKee has called the timing of a leaked letter, reportedly from Sinn Féin, to a group accused of having links to the dissident republican group allegedly behind the journalist’s murder, “exploitative of the tragedy for political purposes”.The two-year-old letter, from Sinn Féin’s Declan Kearney, reportedly referenced a potential “cooperation agreement” between Saoradh and Sinn Féin over achieving a border poll. It was an attempt to “work towards unity and changing the constitutional position, but only by consent, only by the public working together” according to Sinn Féin’s vice-president, Michelle O’Neill, as she confirmed Kearney had written a letter to Saoradh. Continue reading...
Byelections: will recent scandals at Westminster cause upsets at the polls?
Voters may choose to punish governing party in two forthcoming contests, as they have in previous byelectionsThe Conservative MP for Tiverton and Honiton, Neil Parish, announced he would quit as an MP after admitting to twice watching pornography in the House of Commons, triggering another byelection. It comes days after the resignation of Imran Ahmad Khan, Tory MP for Wakefield, who was found guilty of sexual assault.While Parish’s seat at least may seem safe for the Tories, recent byelections have brought shock results. Here’s a rundown of the two votes to come – and the eight already held since the last general election. Continue reading...
Unions eye pay rises that reflect inflation as Queensland public sector agreements expire
Teachers, nurses, police officers and transport workers all have agreements set to end this year
Staff at London law firm can work from home full-time – if they take 20% pay cut
Stephenson Harwood makes offer as more City companies weigh up post-Covid flexibility for employeesStaff at a top London law firm have been told they can work from home permanently – but they will have to take a 20% pay cut.Managing partners at Stephenson Harwood are offering lawyers and other staff the option as City firms try to move beyond solely office-based working in a post-pandemic cultural shift to flexible and remote models. Continue reading...
Icac commissioner calls critics ‘buffoons’ after Scott Morrison labels it a kangaroo court
Stephen Rushton’s comments come after the prime minister criticised the NSW Icac model
Qantas announces plans for non-stop flights from Sydney to New York and London
Airline plans flights from south-east Australia by end of 2025 to run up to 20 hours and be among world’s longest
Mariupol evacuee recounts terror in bunkers below Azovstal steelworks
Natalia Usmanova felt the bunker shake as Russian bombs rained down and fear gripped those hunkering underground
Iraq engulfed by dust storm, leaving dozens hospitalised and flights grounded
Thick sheet of orange shrouds country as experts say phenomenon to become more frequent due to drought and declining rainfallIraq was yet again covered in a thick sheet of orange on Sunday as it suffered the latest in a series of dust storms that have become increasingly common.Dozens were hospitalised with respiratory problems in the centre and the west of the country. Continue reading...
UK guide dog charity seeks brainy puppies to help breed problem-solvers
Cognition project for eight-week-olds consists of series of tasks, including one that’s unsolvableResearchers are hoping to unleash a generation of smarter guide dogs by studying the cognitive behaviour of puppies and finding out who the clever boys and girls really are.Guide Dogs, the sight loss charity, will analyse the responses of eight-week-old puppies to see which ones best handle surprises, how they interact with human voices and how they react to difficult and sometimes impossible problems. Continue reading...
Netflix drops Meghan Markle’s animated series amid cutbacks – report
Pearl was to have focused on the adventures of a 12-year-old girl inspired by historically influential female figuresMeghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex, has fallen victim to cutbacks at Netflix, according to a US report that said the struggling streaming giant has dropped plans for her animated series Pearl.Announced to fanfare last summer, with Meghan as its creator and executive producer, the “family series” was to have focused on the adventures of a 12-year-old girl inspired by historically influential female figures. Continue reading...
May Day marches across France send pensions message to Macron
Eight police officers injured and 45 arrests made in Paris after protests on fringes turn violentTens of thousands of people have taken part in French street demonstrations as May Day marches sent a “message” to Emmanuel Macron that he must consult citizens more during his second term, and reverse plans to raise the retirement age or face protests.“There will be a fight over pensions, that’s clear – battle has been declared,” said the leftwing CGT trade union in Toulouse. Trade unionists, environmentalists and parties on the left, as well as yellow-vest anti-government protesters, marched in cities across the country – on what is also known as fête du Travail (Labour Day) in France – demanding a rise in pensions and salaries and an end to Macron’s plan to gradually raise the pension age to 65. Continue reading...
What can be done to tackle sexism and harassment in parliament?
As calls grow for action to address the problem, here are a few practical steps that could be consideredCalls are increasing for action to tackle what is described as an institutionally sexist atmosphere in parliament, one in which harassment – against both women and men – is alleged to have become endemic. So far, however, there has been little in the way of specific ideas. Here are a few possibilities: Continue reading...
Will the RBA lift the cash rate this week to counter inflation – or wait until after the election?
Analysis: The Reserve Bank of Australia finds itself in a strategic and political bind. Credibility is at stake
‘I don’t feel safe here’: Transnistria fears could spark Moldova exodus
Explosions in separatist-controlled region have heightened worries that country could be drawn into the Ukraine warWhen a string of mysterious explosions hit government buildings in Transnistria, the Moscow-backed separatist region of Moldova, there was no immediate claim of responsibility. But for Pasha, a 24-year old journalist from the breakaway region’s capital, Tiraspol, this week’s blasts were a clear sign that it was time to get out.“There was a chance that there would be more attacks, and it’s no fun waiting to find out where would be hit next,” he said. Adding to the uncertainty were growing rumours that men in the region would be mobilised to fight alongside Russian troops across the border in Ukraine. Continue reading...
Local government in England ‘hollowed out’ under Conservatives
Major report finds poorer areas worst affected by deep cuts in government fundingPoorer areas have been hit disproportionally by a combination of cuts to neighbourhood services such as parks, libraries, refuse collection and children’s centres that have left English councils “hollowed out” since 2010, a major report into local government has concluded.The study by the Institute for Government thinktank found that while some councils coped better than others, and reduced spending did not necessarily mean worse results, a lack of information made it difficult to learn lessons. Continue reading...
Scholz defends Ukraine policy as criticism mounts in Germany
Opposition leader to visit Kyiv on Monday and Ukrainian ambassador says military aid pledged is ‘not enough’The German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has defended himself against accusations that his approach to Russian aggression has been hesitant and timid, insisting his decisions followed close consultation with Germany’s allies and sought to avoid any suspicion that the country was “going it alone”.Scholz has faced fierce criticism even from within his own government and last week came under particular fire from the opposition leader, Friedrich Merz, who accused him of weak leadership and of “procrastination, dithering and timidity”. On Sunday it was reported that Merz was planning to travel to Kyiv on Monday. Continue reading...
Immigration officers placed in 25 local authorities by Home Office, FoI reveals
Embedded officials can pass the details of undocumented people to immigration enforcementThe Home Office has placed immigration officers in child social services and dozens of other local authority departments, in an arrangement that has raised concerns about the ability of the most vulnerable to seek support, the Guardian can reveal.The officers are part of an “enhanced checking service” that includes providing information about people’s right to work and their eligibility for council services. The embedded official can also pass the details of undocumented people to immigration enforcement officers. Continue reading...
Hundreds of Ukrainian families halt bids to reach UK after visa delays
Some have returned to Mariupol area in frustration and some British sponsors also quitting scheme, it is claimedHundreds of Ukrainian families are pulling out of the Homes for Ukraine scheme because of delays in issuing visas to travel to the UK, with some subsequently returning to their wartorn country.Not only are frustrated Ukrainian refugees withdrawing from the scheme after waiting up to six weeks for a visa to materialise, but UK sponsors are also deciding to walk away because of problems with issuing visas to families fleeing the war. Continue reading...
Lib Dems are the real challengers in Neil Parish’s seat, says Ed Davey
Party to declare itself most likely to beat Tories in byelection, but leader denies pact with LabourThe Liberal Democrats view themselves as the likely challengers to the Conservatives in the forthcoming Tiverton and Honiton byelection, Ed Davey has said, despite his party finishing behind Labour in the past three general elections.The Conservatives have held the Devon seat continuously since it was created in 1997, but could face a tough battle following the resignation of MP Neil Parish after he admitted twice watching pornography in the House of Commons chamber. Continue reading...
Tory failure to act has made Commons misogyny worse, says Keir Starmer
Labour leader says ‘fish rots from the head’ after resignation of Neil Parish for watching porn in parliamentA culture of misogyny and harassment in parliament has been worsened by the government’s repeated attempts to delay disciplinary action against misbehaving Tory MPs, Keir Starmer has argued, saying that “a fish rots from the head”.Starmer said real change had to be “led and modelled from the top” when asked about new claims of abusive and sexualised behaviour by MPs following the resignation of the Conservative backbencher Neil Parish for watching pornography in the Commons chamber. Continue reading...
‘We’re collateral damage’: fury in Yorkshire village at its role in migrant detention plan
Priti Patel has buried ‘humane’ plans for refugees – and in Linton-on-Ouse, locals fear a new ‘reception centre’ has an undisclosed purposeFor Priti Patel, the findings of the report on her desk were no doubt unpalatable. Fixated on creating a system that detained and quickly removed asylum seekers, the home secretary would have been shocked to discover that some officials in her department were now enthusing about a “humane” alternative.At precisely the same time as the Home Office was secretly drawing up options for new immigration removal centres, civil servants elsewhere in the department were championing an option that may have rendered such plans redundant. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: what we know on day 67 of the invasion
Twenty wounded civilians escape Mariupol steel plant, and Nancy Pelosi makes surprise visit to Kyiv
Rice magnate with Middle East-based firm revealed as major Tory donor
Karan Chanana’s £220,000 donation to the Conservatives turns spotlight back on laxity of rules banning contributions from foreign companiesA supermarket rice magnate whose firm is based in the Middle East is one of the Conservative party’s major backers, donating through a foreign-owned company with millions of pounds of debt, the Observer can reveal.Karan Chanana, 49, the head of the global rice brand Amira, has donated more than £220,000 to the Conservative party through his British company Amira G Foods since September 2019. Continue reading...
Labor’s election pitch: five key policies unveiled at party’s campaign launch
Anthony Albanese outlines vision for medicines, manufacturing jobs, gender pay equity, electric vehicles and housing affordability
Children’s book on the Queen’s jubilee given cold shoulder by schools in Wales and Scotland
Details released of tale about Queen’s 70-year reign, which is felt to be too ‘Anglocentric’ by devolved governmentsThe platinum jubilee children’s book due to go out to every state primary school pupil to celebrate the Queen this month will not be welcomed in all Welsh or Scottish schools.On the request of the Scottish and Welsh governments, schools in those regions will be asked instead to opt-in to receive copies. Continue reading...
Sydney Olympics were bought ‘to a large extent’, said Australian official John Coates
Hero or hoax? The man who broke into Auschwitz – or maybe didn’t
Denis Avey’s publishers plan changes to new editions of bestseller as researcher raises alarmIt started with an extraordinary tale of wartime bravery and led to the publication of a bestselling account, The Man Who Broke Into Auschwitz, and to a BBC documentary. Then the difficult questions began. Were the heroic exploits of Denis Avey really all they seemed? Was his dramatic claim he had swapped places with a man inside a concentration camp possibly a fake?In spite of growing doubts, Avey’s story that he saved the life of a Jewish prisoner by placing himself in danger while he was being held in a prisoner-of-war sub-camp near Auschwitz is still in popular currency. Continue reading...
Albanese rallies against ‘fear and division’ at Labor campaign launch – as it happened
Anthony Albanese and senior Labor members speak at ALP campaign launch in Perth; Scott Morrison speaks at Sydney rally; Coalition outlines e-safety plan; Greens announce LGBTQ+ equality plan; Victoria reports seven Covid deaths; NSW reports five; South Australia reports two. This blog is now closed
UK government drops maternity charity after critical tweets
Group championing rights of new mothers and pregnant women removed after commenting on government’s lack of progressA charity that champions the employment rights of pregnant women and new mothers has been dropped from a government advisory board after posting critical tweets.In recent months, senior Tories including the culture secretary Nadine Dorries and her predecessor Oliver Dowden have taken pains to position themselves as champions of free speech, decrying “cancel culture”. Continue reading...
Director of new Bob Marley movie casts actor with no musical training
‘I was more interested in his acting,’ says Reinaldo Marcus Green in his decision to choose a rising star of British film and theatre to play the king of reggaeHe was the king of reggae, a giant of Jamaican music whose life was cut short in 1981, aged just 36. Now Bob Marley is to be celebrated on the big screen with a film that will be shot in London and Jamaica this autumn.Kingsley Ben-Adir, a rising star of British film and theatre, whose previous roles include Malcolm X in One Night in Miami, will play Marley in the Paramount movie. Continue reading...
Kyiv is ‘the right place to be’, says UK ambassador after returning to city
In an interview after travelling back to Ukraine, Melinda Simmons said she believed Vladimir Putin still intends to seize the capital
Porn shame adds to Tory woes in south-west as party fears poll blow
In Neil Parish’s Devon seat, and further north in the Red Wall, there’s little comfort for Boris JohnsonThe market town of Tiverton, which became prosperous in the 16th and 17th centuries thanks to its thriving wool trade, is usually a tranquil kind of place.But it was an uncomfortable spot to be on Saturday as townsfolk digested the news that their MP, Neil Parish, was under investigation for allegedly watching pornography in the House of Commons. Continue reading...
Labour can take some Tory citadels this week – but don’t expect a clear-cut UK result
The party is fighting a tough local election map, but could still benefit from symbolic triumphs in high-profile Tory strongholdsLabour heads into this week’s local elections with a spring in its step. The government is in the doldrums, the prime minister is scandal-tainted and unpopular, and the opposition is preferred on nearly all the major issues of the day. Labour has led the opinion polls for months, and Keir Starmer has opened up a lead over the diminished and beleaguered Boris Johnson, becoming the first Labour leader in a decade to hold such an advantage over his Conservative opponent. This sounds like a political environment in which Labour should prosper at the polls.Not so fast. The bulk of this year’s English contests are being fought on Labour’s strongest terrain – London and other big cities – meaning more seats to defend and fewer opportunities for gains. Labour was also riding high when these seats were last contested. The 2018 contest, fought in the wake of Jeremy Corbyn’s 2017 campaign surge, was Labour’s strongest local election showing in the last decade. Continue reading...
Four in five people in the UK believe in being ‘woke’ to race and social justice
Survey shows public attitudes across age, gender, region and voting habits are less polarised than culture wars might suggestAn overwhelming majority of people in the UK hold the “woke” belief that it is important to be alive to issues of race and social justice, according to a new analysis of public attitudes.Four in five Britons believe in being attentive to those issues – the definition of “woke” used by the Merriam-Webster dictionary – leading researchers to claim the country is not as divided by culture wars as is often assumed. An overwhelming majority of Conservative voters and those who backed Brexit also said it was important to be attentive to the issues. Continue reading...
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