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Updated 2026-03-27 13:30
Russia and Ukraine ‘close to agreeing’ on neutral status, says Sergei Lavrov
Foreign minister’s claim undermined by aggressive comments from Vladimir Putin
Couple hurt in Alton Towers rollercoaster crash get engaged
Leah Washington and Joe Pugh had been dating for a month when the accident happened in June 2015A couple who were seriously injured in a rollercoaster crash at Alton Towers have got engaged.Leah Washington and Joe Pugh had been dating for about a month when in 2015 they decided to go to Alton Towers and their rollercoaster carriage crashed into a stationary carriage on the same track at 90mph. Continue reading...
UN International Court of Justice orders Russia to halt invasion of Ukraine
Judge says court in The Hague has seen no evidence to support Kremlin’s justification for the war
Dominic Cummings accuses Boris Johnson of lying in Lebedev row
Former aide says PM was told intelligence services had serious reservations about peerage planDominic Cummings has accused Boris Johnson of lying over claims that intelligence officers’ security concerns about giving a peerage to a Russian media magnate and son of a former KGB were overridden.The prime minister dismissed as “simply incorrect” reports last week that he tried to intervene to hand Evgeny Lebedev a seat in the House of Lords and law-making powers for life against the advice of UK spy agencies. Continue reading...
France may offer Corsica ‘autonomy’ as it struggles to quell protests
Interior minister says government, faced with major crisis before April presidential election, open to talksParis could offer “autonomy” to Corsica, the French government has said, suggesting the state might be willing to loosen its historic, centralised grip on the Mediterranean island as it struggles to calm violent protests.“We are ready to go as far as autonomy – there you go, the word has been said,” the interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, told the regional newspaper Corse Matin before a two-day visit, that comes after two weeks of rioting in which 100 people were injured and public buildings and police were attacked with homemade explosive devices. Continue reading...
‘Russian soldiers took over my farm’: the battle for food supplies in Ukraine
Farmers in Ukraine describe depleting potato stocks, slaughtering their own pigs, and Russian troops appearing at the gateThe Russian invasion of Ukraine has upended the farming industry, raising fears of disruption to domestic and international food supplies. The Guardian has spoken to three farmers about what life is like on the ground, with the Russian army hiding tanks in barns and stocks of potatoes expected to deplete within weeks.Andrii Pastushenko, 39, is a dairy farmer who lives 12 miles from Kherson in the south of Ukraine, a city that has been under control of the Russian military. Continue reading...
Imperial War Museum in London to keep donation from Roman Abramovich
Museum says decision to retain funding for Holocaust Galleries complies with UK sanctions against Russian oligarch
Fed expected to raise interest rates for first time since 2018, markets rise on Ukraine hopes – as it happened
Black girl strip-searched by Met officers at London school tells of trauma
Fifteen-year-old says incident has left her wanting to ‘scream, shout, cry or give up’ every day
Almost all UK’s top firms have at least one ethnic minority board member
Ninety-seven FTSE 100 companies have committed to scheme to improve diversity – but only six CEOs are from BAME backgroundMost of Britain’s top companies now have at least one ethnic minority board member, the government-backed Parker review, set up to improve the diversity of UK boards, said on Wednesday.Improving boardroom diversity has become a hot topic for policymakers and investors in recent years, as many believe it helps address social inequalities and leads to better decision-making and performance over time. Continue reading...
Lloyd’s of London fines Atrium more than £1m for failing to tackle bullying
Lloyd’s issued its largest ever fine for mishandling of harassment case and ‘tolerating’ inappropriate staff eventThe insurance market Lloyd’s of London has issued the largest fine in its 336-year history after a member firm mishandled a bullying and harassment case and hosted an inappropriate “Boys’ Night Out” event for staff.Lloyd’s announced on Wednesday that it had fined Atrium Underwriters more than £1m due to “serious failures” by the firm, which was shown to have tolerated discrimination, harassment and bullying over a number of years. Continue reading...
Russian TV producer ‘extremely concerned’ for safety after protest live on air
Marina Ovsyannikova says she stands by her actions in first interview since live TV intervention
Three boys missing from Lake District village are found
Logan Gray, nine, Kye Hollingworth, 13, and Harley Anderton, 14, were subject of huge police searchThree boys who prompted a huge police search after going missing from a remote Lake District village have been found.Officers said Logan Gray, nine, Kye Hollingworth, 13, and Harley Anderton, 14, disappeared from Witherslack on Tuesday. The three were believed to be together and police carried out searches overnight in the local area. Continue reading...
Germany hits record Covid infection rate since start of pandemic
Over past seven days 262,593 cases have been recorded, but with testing facilities at capacity, number could be higherGermany has recorded its highest rate of Covid-19 infections since the start of the pandemic, as mask-wearing mandates in shops, restaurants and schools will come to an end in many parts of the country this weekend.The country’s disease control agency on Wednesday reported a record incidence rate of 1,607 new infections per 100,000 people over the past seven days, one of the highest in Europe. Germany’s Robert Koch Institute has recorded a total of 262,593 confirmed new cases over the same time period and 269 new deaths within 24 hours. Continue reading...
Protests in Sudan after alleged gang-rape of young woman by security forces
Women fear use of sexual violence as a ‘tactic’ against those protesting the coup, after attack on 18-year-old in KhartoumDemonstrations took place across Sudan on Tuesday in protest at the alleged gang-rape of a teenager by security forces.The 18-year-old said she was attacked in Khartoum on Monday by up to nine men dressed in the uniforms of the security forces involved in dispersing regular protests held across Sudan since October’s military coup. Continue reading...
Demons win grand final rematch as Bulldogs downed in AFL season opener
Wagamama owner and Fever-Tree warn of cost increases as energy prices soar
The Restaurant Group mindful of impact of Russia-Ukraine war, while drinks maker lowers profit guidance
Widespread abuses since Myanmar coup may amount to war crimes, says UN report
UN rights office warns military has shown ‘flagrant disregard for human life’ and has deliberately targeted civilians since it seized power on 1 February 2021Myanmar’s military junta has committed widespread and systematic abuses against civilians that may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity, according to the first comprehensive report to be produced by the UN’s human rights office since last year’s coup.The UN rights office warns the military has shown “flagrant disregard for human life” and has deliberately targeted civilians since it seized power on 1 February 2021. Continue reading...
Russia playing ‘smoke and mirrors game’, says Liz Truss
UK foreign secretary also says Kremlin could extend ambitions to other east European countries in effort ‘recreate the Soviet Union’
‘Targeted discrimination’: NSW government rejects Mark Latham’s trans bill
Proposals included a ban on transgender school students from confidentially coming out and restrictions on sports and toilets
‘An abomination’: Morrison signals sanctions against China if it helps arm Russia
PM says Australia ‘will move in lockstep’ with allies on sanctioning the country’s largest trading partner
‘Extraordinarily disrespectful’: Albanese hits back after Labor senators dubbed ‘mean girls’
Rebuke followed story in The Australian about alleged disagreements between Kimberley Kitching and a group of female Labor senators
Giant New Zealand potato is not in fact a potato, Guinness World Records rules
Couple who believed they had dug up the world’s largest potato in the garden of their small farm near Hamilton have had their dreams turned to mashWhen is a potato not a potato? When it’s a tuber of a gourd, according to Guinness World Records.A New Zealand couple who believed they had dug up the world’s largest potato in the garden of their small farm near Hamilton have had their dreams turned to mash after Guinness wrote to say that scientific testing had found it wasn’t, in fact, a potato after all. Continue reading...
‘If I can’t have you, no one will’: murder trial hears Victorian man allegedly tracked ex-wife’s movements
Supreme court trial hears death of man’s ex-wife was allegedly made to look like suicide
Nadine Dorries lambasts Silicon Valley ahead of new online abuse laws
As the UK government prepares legislation, culture secretary criticises tech leaders who “decide who is silenced or cancelled”Silicon Valley executives will no longer be the “supreme arbiters” of online speech, according to the culture secretary, as the government prepares to publish reformed legislation to tackle online abuse.Nadine Dorries said “unelected” tech leaders had become some of the most powerful people in the world due to a lack of robust regulation, adding that the situation will change under the online safety bill. This imposes a duty of care on tech companies to protect users from harmful content. A revised version will be published on Thursday. Continue reading...
Zelenskiy says Russia’s position in negotiations is becoming ‘more realistic’ as fears deepen for Mariupol
Ukrainian PM says more time is needed for negotiations to bear fruit as he prepares to address US Congress
UN says 75,000 children have become refugees - as it happened
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Ben Roberts-Smith accused of ‘intimidating witnesses’ to war crimes inquiry, court hears
Court also hears evidence from serving SAS veteran that Victoria Cross recipient wanted to ‘choke a man to death with my bare hands’ in Afghanistan
How the UK finally turned on Roman Abramovich
When Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea in 2003, he transformed the club’s fortunes and ushered in a new era of billionaire owners in the Premier League. But as David Conn explains, the issues that led to sanctions being imposed on him last week by the government have been in plain view for yearsFor nearly two decades, Roman Abramovich has sat at the top table of English football. His purchase of Chelsea in 2003 transformed the club from perennial underachievers to a major force in European football that has since won every major tournament the continent offers. But right from day one, as the Guardian’s investigative reporter David Conn tells Nosheen Iqbal, there have been questions about the origins of his wealth – as well as his closeness to the Kremlin.Following the invasion of Ukraine, Abramovich was last week placed on a list of individuals to have sanctions imposed upon them by the UK government, meaning that all his assets in Britain were frozen – including Chelsea FC. With the club now in crisis and up for sale, Conn looks back on what the Abramovich era has meant for English football, and why the authorities are only taking action now. Continue reading...
Former resident charged with murder after three die in Sydney boarding house fire
Police are still seeking to establish a motive for the alleged lighting of the fatal fire
‘Europe stands with you’: EU leaders vow support for Ukraine during Kyiv visit
Leaders of Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovenia express ‘unequivocal support’ for Ukraine after making perilous journey by train to meet Zelenskiy
‘Death of the suit’: V&A exhibition explores evolution of menswear
From Harry Styles in a dress to gender-neutral dressing and ‘dad bods’, Fashioning Masculinities embraces past and present trendsFrom the death of the suit during the pandemic to Harry Styles appearing on the cover of US Vogue in a dress, the conversations around masculinity and fashion appear to be contemporary, however a new exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum aims to link modern men’s fashion to its storied past.Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear, which opens on 19 March, will feature a host of contemporary fashion designers (Versace, Calvin Klein, Martine Rose) alongside historical examples of the way men dressed (from Bowie to Beau Brummell). There are more than 100 pieces which the curators hope will illustrate how glacial the trends around men’s fashion actually are. Continue reading...
Covid cases rise sharply in NSW to more than 30,000 with data glitch only partly to blame
Victoria also recorded its highest daily coronavirus case total in five weeks as the more-infectious Omicron subvariant spreads
UK refugee scheme could lead to exploitation of Ukrainians, say experts
Promise of ‘light touch’ checks prompts fears traffickers could see arrival of mostly women and children as opportunity
‘The enemy is the same’: Idlib’s message to Ukraine as Syrian war enters 12th year
Rebel enclave hopes global outcry against Russia, the Syrian regime’s main backer, will renew interest in their causeThousands of protesters in the rebel enclave of Idlib have marked 11 years since the start of Syria’s anti-government uprising, buoyed up by the global outcry over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.More than 5,000 people gathered on the main square in the north-western city on Tuesday in one of the largest rallies the region had seen in months. Many demonstrators hoped the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, the Syrian government’s main backer, would rekindle interest in their cause. Continue reading...
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s six years of bewilderment and injustice
British-Iranian woman has endured almost unbearable psychological stress since her arrest at Tehran airport in April 2016In White Torture, a book about the horror of solitary confinement in Iranian jails, Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe recalled her first night in jail following her arrest at Tehran airport on 3 April 2016.“The first night of detention I did not know where I was,” she explained. “I don’t remember what happened or what I did. I was shocked. I didn’t know why it had happened. No one gave me any explanations. Nobody told me why they were treating me like that, why they took my child away from me or where I was. The interrogation began.” Continue reading...
Ed Sheeran copyright trial: songwriter made ‘concerted plan’
Former management for Sami Chokri allegedly made ‘huge effort’ to bring song Oh Why to singer’s notice, court hearsEd Sheeran was targeted with a “concerted plan” to secure his interest in a songwriter who later accused him of copying one of his songs, the high court has been told.The former management company for Sami Chokri, a grime artist who performs under the name Sami Switch, allegedly made a “huge effort” to bring the 2015 song Oh Why to Sheeran’s notice, the copyright trial heard on Tuesday. Continue reading...
Spain: call for return of stolen kit containing radioactive material
The bright yellow Troxler density and moisture gauge was stolen from a van 25km south of MadridSpain’s Nuclear Safety Council (CSN) has appealed for people to be on the lookout for a soil-testing kit containing radioactive material that was stolen from a van in the Madrid region.In a statement released on Tuesday, the CSN said it had been notified of the theft of the bright yellow Troxler density and moisture gauge, which was taken after the van’s rear door was forced open in the town of Humanes, 25km south of the capital. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson going ‘from dictator to dictator’ for oil, says Starmer
Labour leader warns about replacing dependence on Russia with reliance on Saudis, as PM prepares for Gulf visitKeir Starmer has accused Boris Johnson of “going cap in hand from dictator to dictator,” as the prime minister prepares to fly to Saudi Arabia to seek alternatives to Russian oil supplies.Johnson has a personal relationship with the Saudi leader, Mohammed bin Salman, and government sources suggest he could help persuade the Saudis to increase oil production. The prime minister defended the trip on Tuesday, saying he had to build a coalition of countries to help the west reduce its dependence on Vladimir Putin, likening the Russian leader to a drug dealer who had got the west hooked on his hydrocarbons.
Attempted Aboriginal massacres took place as recently as 1981, historian says
Alice Springs mass poisoning claimed two lives and left many in hospital but remains unsolved, showing challenges of verifying frontier killings
Bob Saget’s fractures possibly caused by falling on carpeted floor
Full House and America’s Funniest Home Videos star died from accidental blow to the head, medical examiner concludedFractures around Bob Saget’s eye sockets and bleeding around his brain were possibly caused by the comedian hitting “something hard, covered by something soft”, such as a carpeted floor, according to a report released on Tuesday that provided more details of the death of the TV star.The 65-year-old star of Full House and America’s Funniest Home Videos was found by a hotel security officer on his bed at the Ritz Carlton in Orlando on 9 January, after he failed to check out and his family asked for a wellbeing check. Continue reading...
EU hits Roman Abramovich with sanctions in new action against Russia
Boss of state TV protester among individuals targeted, as investment and luxury exports are banned
Fox News cameraman and producer killed in Ukraine
Irish cameraman Pierre Zakrzewski and Ukrainian producer Oleksandra Kuvshynova killed in attack outside KyivTwo Fox News journalists – producer Oleksandra Kuvshynova and cameraman Pierre Zakrzewski – were killed in the attack outside Kyiv which injured correspondent Benjamin Hall, the US network and its journalists confirmed on Tuesday.Fox News in a statement only announced the death of Zakrzewski. Ukrainian officials and Fox News reporters confirmed that Kuvshynova was also killed in the attack. Continue reading...
Lord Speaker urges tougher vetting amid concerns over Evgeny Lebedev
Lord McFall’s comment follows calls for parliamentary pass of Russia-born peer to be revoked
‘It’s wrong’: expert calls on Queensland to ban political donations from lobbyists
Accepting donations from lobbyists ‘defeats the purpose of donation transparency’, says public policy expert
Mother of Plymouth shooter reported him to Prevent anti-terror scheme
Maxine Davison, who was killed with four others, voiced concerns before Jake Davison successfully applied for shotgun licenceThe mother of Jake Davison, who shot her and four other people dead in Plymouth, Devon, had reported him to the government’s counter-terrorism Prevent programme months before he applied for a shotgun licence, a coroner has heard.Maxine Davison, 51, contacted the programme in November 2016 with concerns about her son but Davison applied for a shotgun certificate in July 2017 and a certificate was issued to him in January 2018. Continue reading...
The detention of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe in Iran – a timeline
The story of the British-Iranian woman’s arrest and imprisonment, and the efforts to free herAs Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has her British passport returned amid reports the UK government has paid a decades-old £400m debt to Iran in a move that could facilitate her release from Tehran, we take a look at the British-Iranian woman’s continuing nightmare, which has lasted nearly six years.3 April 2016 Continue reading...
HSBC to close 69 more bank branches as Covid speeds shift online
Which? describes number of bank closures as ‘alarming’, with many customers unable to go digitalHSBC is to shut a further 69 branches, on top of the 82 it axed last year, claiming the pandemic has accelerated the shift to digital banking.It is the latest in a line of banks to announce it is reducing its network in response to changing customer habits. Consumer organisation Which? said the number of closures during the last few years was “alarming” and that millions of people were not yet ready or able to go fully digital. Continue reading...
Leonor Fini works among treasures for sale from extraordinary New York home
Gallery owner and his husband filled Chelsea apartment with paintings, ceramics and other artOver more than four decades, Neil Zukerman, a New York gallery owner, and his husband, Tom Shivers, filled their Chelsea loft with paintings, books, ceramics, glassware, figurines, silk flowers and countless other treasures. “We only ever had things in our house that we loved. And if we loved it, we found a place for it,” said Shivers.But after Zukerman’s death at the age of 81 last year, Shivers decided to sell some of the couple’s extraordinary collection, including 90 works by Leonor Fini, the 20th-century artist famous for her depictions of powerful and erotic women. Continue reading...
Man accused of suggesting murder of Spain PM tells court he was drunk
Manuel Murillo, a 66-year-old gun enthusiast from Catalonia, says he was overworked and had been drinking heavilyA 66-year-old gun enthusiast accused of suggesting the murder of Spain’s Socialist prime minister “to force a change in the political life of the country” has told a court he was never serious about the assassination, blaming his words on too much wine, brandy and bravado.Manuel Murillo, a security guard from Terrassa in Catalonia, could face 18 and a half years in prison if convicted of proposing the murder of Pedro Sánchez and of possessing illegal weapons and ammunition. Continue reading...
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